THE STATE OF THE
WORLD’S MIDWIFERY 2014
A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN’S RIGHT TO HEALTH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
PREGNANCY
CHILDBIRTH
POSTNATAL
CONTRIBUTORS AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS STEERING COMMITTEE Co-chairs: Frances Day-Stirk, Laura Laski, Elizabeth Mason. Members: Jean Barry, Benedict David, Luc de Bernis, Peter Johnson, Louise Holly, Tina Lavender, Gillian Mann, Betsy McCallon, Anders Molin, Arulkumaran Sabaratnam, Carole Presern, Simon Wright. CORE GROUP Coordinator: Luc de Bernis Members: Jim Campbell, Catherine Carr, Sheena Currie, Caroline Homer, Petra ten Hoope-Bender, Peter Johnson, Zoë Matthews, Fran McConville, Nester Moyo, Mwansa Nkowane, Grace Omoni, Francisco Pozo-Martin, CN Puradane, Amani Siyam, Laura Sochas. COUNTRY SURVEY, DATA ANALYSIS AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT UNFPA: Luc de Bernis, Susana Edjang. Secretariat: ICS Integrare, University of Southampton, University of Technology Sydney: Aferdita Bytyqi, Jim Campbell, Vincent Fauveau, Stephanie Fletcher, Maria Guerra-Arias, Caroline Homer, Sofia Lopes, Zoë Matthews, Joanne McManus, Andrea Nove, Francisco Pozo-Martin, Anna Rayne, Hishiv Shah, Laura Sochas, Andrew Tatem, Petra ten Hoope-Bender. Technical contributions: Edson Araújo, Deborah Armbruster, Albert Arnó, Patsy Bailey, Jean Ball, David Benton, Ismat Bhuiya, Ties Boerma, Jim Buchan, Amos Channon, Asiful Haidar Chowdhury, Laurence Codjia, Mario Dal Poz, Kim Dickson, Gilles Dussault, Tim Evans, Lynn Freedman, Sennen Hounton, Louise Hulton, Marge Koblinsky, Teena Kunjumen, Mandy La Fleur, Thierry Lambrechts, Christophe Lemière, Jacqueline Mahon, Adriane Martin-Hilber, Laura Matthews, Allisyn Moran, Sarah Neal, Juliette Puret, Kathrin Radke, Charlotte Renard, Rachel Sanders, Susheela Singh, Jeff Smith, Ann Starrs, Wim Van Lerberghe, Marie Washbrook. Country contributions: Many thanks to the heads of the UNFPA and WHO country offices, their staff, and the people that coordinated, completed, and verified responses to the State of the World’s Midwifery country survey. In particular, thanks to the country focal points: Hissani Aboubacar, Kodjovi Edotsè Adjeoda, Anna af Ugglas, Jamil Ahmed, Guy C. Ahialegbedzi, Arlette Akoueikou, Fernanda Alves, Mary Nana Ama Brantuo, Nazira Artykova, Zulfiya Atadjanova, Amalia Ayala, Farid Babayev, Radouane Belouali, Jeannette Biboussi, Zainab Blell, Malin Bogren, Edith Boni Ouattara, Rayana Bou Haka, François Busogoro, Gillian Butts-Garnett, Felister Bwana, Jean-René Camara, Alicia Carbonell, Jose Manuel Carvalho, Rene Alberto Castro, Ahmed Chahir, Maria José Costa, Thierno Ousmane Coulibaly, Hirondina Cucubica, Evelyne Degraff, Pilar de la Corte Molina, Saliou Dian Diallo, Sadio Diarra, Aicha Djama, Dudu Dlamini, Javier Dominguez, Dat Van Duong, Marie Sheyla Durandisse, Musu Duworko, Henriette Eke Mbula, Hala El Hennawy, Kerstin Erlandsson,
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AAAQ AVD B-EmONC C-EmONC CHW CMDP EC EmONC GIS GPS HCPAs HRH ICM ICN
availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality assisted vaginal delivery basic emergency obstetric and newborn care comprehensive emergency obstetric and newborn care community health worker Community-based Midwifery Diploma Programme emergency contraception emergency obstetric and newborn care geographic information system Global Positioning System health-care professional associations human resources for health International Confederation of Midwives International Council of Nurses
Nicole Eteki, Mahamat Malloum Fatime, Feruza Fazilova, Rustini Floranita, Monica Fong, Daniel Frade, Paul Francis, Suzie Francis, Dina Gbenou, Rodolfo Gomez, Kemal Goshliyev, Raymond Goula, Nada Hamza, Fredrica Hanson, Sharifullah Haqmal, Gilbert Hiawalyer, Grace Hiwa, Bang Thi Hoang, Aboubacar Inoua, Bakary Jargo, Theopista John Kabuteni, Elizabeth Kalunga, Leonard Kamugisha, Selly Kane Wane, Trevor Kanyowa, Bahtygul Karryeva, Stoelle Patricia Keba, Magdy Khaled, Zareef Khanza, Kyu Kyu Khin, Eunyoung Ko, Ibroh Kouboura Abba Moussa, Alhagie Kolley, Sathyanarayana Kundur, Busisiwe Kunene, Mohammed Lardi, Joyce Lavussa, Dorothy Lazaro, Ana Leitão, Amadou Ouattara Liagui, Ornella Lincetto, Elvira Liyanto, Jean-Pierre Lokonga, Fernanda Lopes, Achu Lordfred, Juliana Lunguzi, Primo Madra, Yolande Magonyagi, Agnes Makoni, Sarai Bvulani Malumo, Margaret Mannah-Macarthy, Lucy Sejo Maribe, Michel Mbemba Moutounou, Pauline McNeil, Yordanos Mehari, Willam Michel, Michaela Michel-Schuldt, Happiness Mkhatshwa, Kuban Monolbaev, Maria Mugabo, Khin Aye Myint, Azzah Nofly, Daphrose Nyirasafali, Geoffrey Okumu, Mohamed Boubacar Ould Abdel Aziz, Taiwo Oyelade, Haydee Padilla, Anchita Patil, Jiong Peng, Sano Phal, Zulfiya Pirova, Philderald Pratt, Maria Quaresma Dos Anjos, Ginette Josia Rabefitia, Nargis Rakhimova, Thabelo Ramatlapeng, Masy Harisoa Ramilirijaona, Rabiatu Sageer, Mahamoud Said, Geneviève Saki-Nekouressi, Elfeky Samar, Aminata Seguetio, Olive Sentumbwe, Alejandro Silva, Nurgul Smankulova, Sokun Sok, Gracia Subiria, Areej Taher, Fatim Tall, Kabo Tautona, Afrah Thabet, Meera Thapa Upadhyay, Luwam Teshome, Augusto Viegas, Chumen Wen, Souleymane Zan, Aoua Zerbo, Assefash Zehaie. A full list of the names of all those who contributed is available on page 198 of this report. COMMUNICATIONS AND MEDIA: Cole Bingham, Amy BoldosserBoesch, Julie Cornell, Adam Deixel, Christian Delsol, Etienne Franca, Rachel Haynes, Louise Holly, Ian Hurley, Cathrin Jerie, Omar Kasrawi, Mandy Kibel, Etienne Leue, Ann LoLordo, Joy Marini, Brigid McConville, Patrick McCrummen, Lori Lynn McDougall, Lothar Mikulla, Michelle Park, Sruti Ramadugu, Charlene Reynolds, Alanna Savage, Marta Seoane Aguilo, Ann Starrs, Petra ten Hoope-Bender, Veronic Verlyck, Julia Wiklander. DESIGN, LAYOUT AND PRINTING: Prographics, Inc. TRANSLATIONS: Michel Coclet, Mohammed Khawam
FINANCIAL SUPPORT: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada, Johnson & Johnson, Maternal and Child Health Integrated Program, United States Agency for International Development, Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs (France), Norwegian Agency for International Development, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, United Nations Population Fund. Our appreciation is extended to ICS Integrare and Prographics, Inc. for their support in the research, development, writing and production of the report, and all accompanying materials.
ISCO MDG MMR NMR MNH NGOs PMNCH SRMNH SoWMy STIs TBA UNFPA UHC WHO
International Standard Classification of Occupations Millennium Development Goal maternal mortality ratio neonatal mortality rate maternal and newborn health non-governmental organizations The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health State of the World’s Midwifery sexually transmitted infections traditional birth attendants United Nations Population Fund universal health coverage World Health Organization
Cover photos (left to right): Viviane Fortaillier, Viviane Fortaillier, ICM/Liba Taylor, Save the Children
THE STATE OF THE WORLD’S MIDWIFERY 2014
A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN’S RIGHT TO HEALTH Foreword
ii
BOXES
Executive Summary
iii
1 Three-year direct-entry midwifery education introduced as
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
1
About this report ............................................................................3
CHAPTER 2
THE STATE OF MIDWIFERY TODAY
5
Evidence of progress......................................................................5 Availability .....................................................................................12 Accessibility ..................................................................................16 Acceptability..................................................................................22
Bangladesh recognizes professional midwives ............................................7
2
Examining the midwifery workforce through the lens of effective coverage .........................................................................10
3 4
The geography of SRMNH: advances in geo-information systems ...........17
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Reaching the poorest 40% .........................................................................20
Emergency obstetric and newborn care: from designation to readiness ................................................................................................19 Country actions in Afghanistan, Sierra Leone and Togo ............................21 Respectful care in maternity services ........................................................22 Ensuring acceptability of service through accountability ...........................25 Drivers and changes in health.....................................................................35 Protecting the public: a renewed paradigm ................................................40 The impact of investing in family planning.................................................44 Midwives: a “best buy” for primary health care .......................................45
Quality ...........................................................................................24 Summary .......................................................................................31
CHAPTER 3
MIDWIFERY2030
33
Looking towards 2030 ..................................................................33 Drivers of health, health systems and health financing ...........34 Midwifery2030: A pathway for policy and planning .................36
TABLES 1
ACTIONS reported by countries that relate to the BOLD STEPS identified in SoWMy 2011 ......................................................6
2
Reasons why women do not seek care or feel uncomfortable about seeking care .............................................................23
3 4
Realizing the pathway ..................................................................36 Building from country findings ...................................................42 Midwifery2030: Inspiring global action ......................................45
CHAPTER 4
COUNTRY BRIEFS
49
How to read the country brief .....................................................50
State of the World’s Midwifery Country Survey Respondents
198
References
201
Annexes
205
1 2 3
Glossary.................................................................................205 General methodology ..........................................................208 Methodology for modelling effective coverage of the essential interventions for sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health care.....................................209
4
Estimating women’s and newborns’ need for the 46 essential interventions ....................................................212
5 6
Decision rules........................................................................216
7
Mapping of subnational distributions of populations, women of reproductive age, pregnancies and live births .................................................217 Tasks within the scope of midwifery professionals according to the International Standard Classification of Occupations ......................................................................218
How Midwifery2030 responds to the key findings from SoWMy 2014.....42 Global initiatives and objectives in sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health ...........................................................48
FIGURES 1
Key indicators for maternal and newborn health and the health workforce in 73 of 75 Countdown countries.................................................2
2 3
Pregnancies in 73 countries (1950-2099) ......................................................8
4
Midwifery workforce: Projected need of full-time equivalent workers to deliver sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health services .....9
5
Midwifery workforce: Distribution in 73 countries, and by WHO region .................................................................................................11
6 7 8 9
Midwifery workforce: roles and tasks ........................................................12
Number of sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health visits needed, by WHO region [2012] .....................................................................8
Midwifery workforce: headcount versus full-time equivalent ...................13 Percentage leaving the workforce voluntarily each year, by cadre ............14 Perceptions among survey respondents of the comparative attractiveness of a career as a midwife (73 countries) ..............................15
10 Average monthly starting salary per cadre of health worker
(international $ purchasing power parity, 2012) .........................................15
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Minimum number of births to be conducted under clinical supervision ....26 Regulation and licensing of midwives ........................................................28 Functions and responsibilities of regulatory bodies ...................................29 B-EmONC signal functions: midwives’ authorized and actual roles ..........29 Functions of professional associations open to midwives .........................30 Midwifery workforce: from availability to quality ......................................32 Projected change in population need for SRMNH visits between 2012 and 2030, by WHO region...................................................34
18 Key features of first-level and
next-level midwifery care ...........................................................................37
Foreword throughout pregnancy and childbirth, and save the lives of babies born too early. With leadership and resources, the world can prevent the vast majority of avoidable yet tragically common losses of life and address the vicious cycle of impoverishment that ensues. The State of the World’s Midwifery 2014 documents growing momentum since the first call to action in the 2011 report. Every year, more governments, professional associations and other partners are acting on the evidence that midwifery can dramatically accelerate progress on sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health and universal health coverage.
The world has reached a turning point for women’s and children’s health. We can now celebrate the fact that maternal, neonatal and child mortality rates are at their lowest levels in history. We are poised for even greater progress thanks to the Every Woman Every Child initiative, our progress toward achieving the Millennium Development Goals, as well as the ongoing discussions regarding a set of global sustainable development goals to succeed the Millennium Development Goals after their target completion date of 2015. This report links two specific areas of focus that I care deeply about: first, maternal and newborn health, and second, the overarching principles and values of the post-2015 development agenda, providing new evidence for decision-makers. The midwifery workforce, within a supportive health system, can support women and girls to prevent unwanted pregnancies, provide assistance
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T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
I fully support the Midwifery 2030 vision articulated in this report. This vision is within reach of all countries, at all stages of economic and demographic transition. Its implementation will help governments to deliver on women’s right to health, ensure that women and newborn infants obtain the care they need, and contribute to our shared, global ambition to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths. I commend this report to all those interested in joining the United Nations as we work towards the Midwifery 2030 vision and improve the future of women’s and children’s health.
Ban Ki-moon Secretary-General of the United Nations
Executive Summary The State of the World’s Midwifery (SoWMy) 2014: A Universal Pathway. A Woman’s Right to Health takes its inspiration from the United Nations Secretary-General’s Every Woman Every Child initiative and his call to action in September 2013 to do everything possible to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015 and work towards the development and adoption of a post-2015 agenda based on the principle of universality. SoWMy 2014’s main objective, agreed at the 2nd Global Midwifery Symposium held in Kuala Lumpur in May 2013, is to provide an evidence base on the state of the world’s midwifery in 2014 that will: support policy dialogue between governments and their partners; accelerate progress on the health MDGs; identify developments in the three years since the SoWMy 2011 report was published; and inform negotiations for and preparation of the post-2015 development agenda. SoWMy 2014 focuses on 73 of the 75 low- and middle-income countries that are included in the “Countdown to 2015” reports. More than 92% of all the world’s maternal and newborn deaths and stillbirths occur within these 73 countries. However, only 42% of the world’s medical, midwifery and nursing personnel are available to women and newborn infants (hereafter ‘newborns’) in these countries. Midwifery is a key element of sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health (SRMNH) care and is defined in this report as: the health services and health workforce needed to support and care for women and newborns, including sexual and reproductive health and especially pregnancy, labour and postnatal care. This enables analysis of the diverse ways in which midwifery is delivered by a range of health-care professionals and associate professionals. SoWMy 2014 has been co-ordinated by the United Nations Population Fund, the International Confederation of Midwives and the World Health Organization on behalf of government repre-
sentatives and national stakeholders in the 73 countries and 30 global development partners. Tangible progress has been made in improving midwifery in many countries since the SoWMy 2011 report: 33 of the 73 countries (45%) report vigorous attempts to improve workforce retention in remote areas; 20 countries (28%) have started to increase recruitment and deployment of midwives; 13 countries (18%) have prepared plans to establish regulatory bodies; and 14 (20%) have a new code of practice and/or regulatory framework. Perhaps the most impressive collective step forward is the improvement in workforce data, information and accountability, reported by 52 countries (71%).
It has been widely acknowledged that investing in a proficient, motivated midwifery workforce has a great impact on maternal and newborn health. (Jhpiego/Kate Holt)
The evidence and analysis in SoWMy 2014 is structured by the four domains that determine whether a health system and its health workforce are providing effective coverage, i.e. whether women are obtaining the care they want and
EX EC UTIV E S UMMA RY
iii
or correlating the midwifery workforce with SRMNH outputs/outcomes should take full-time equivalent staffing as the measure of availability. The evidence identifies opportunities to: align job titles, roles and responsibilities; strengthen linkages between education and employment: improve efficiency; and assess and reduce high levels of turnover and attrition. In particular, progress is required on the identity, status and salaries of midwives, removing gender discrimination and addressing the lack of political attention to issues which only affect women.
Not all countries have a dedicated professional cadre focused on supporting women and newborns. (Mamaye Sierra Leone)
need in relation to SRMNH services. These four domains are: availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality. Availability: SoWMy 2014 provides new estimates of the essential SRMNH services needed by women and newborns. This need for services, in each country, can be converted into the need for the midwifery workforce. Midwives, when educated and regulated to international standards, have the competencies to deliver 87% of this service need. However, midwives make up only 36% of the reported midwifery workforce: not all countries have a dedicated professional cadre focused on supporting women and newborns. Instead there is diversity in the typologies, roles and composition of health workers contributing to midwifery services, and many of these workers spend less than 100% of their time on SRMNH services. The new evidence on diversity presented in SoWMy 2014 can inform policy and planning. Firstly, the availability of the midwifery workforce and the roles they perform cannot be deduced from job titles. Secondly, the full-time equivalent midwifery workforce represents less than two thirds of all workers spending time on SRMNH services. Therefore, any analysis comparing
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T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
Accessibility: Although nearly all of the 73 countries recognize the importance of financial accessibility and have a policy of offering at least some essential elements of SRMNH care free of charge at the point of access, only 4 provide a national “minimum guaranteed benefits package� for SRMNH that includes all the essential interventions. Gaps in the essential interventions include those known to reduce the four leading causes of maternal mortality: severe bleeding; infections; high blood pressure during pregnancy (pre-eclampsia and eclampsia); and unsafe abortion. Lack of geographical data on health facilities and midwifery workers precludes reliable assessment of whether all women have access to a health worker when needed. Improving accessibility requires making all urban and rural areas attractive to health workers, and ensuring that all barriers to care, including lack of transportation, essential medicines and health-care workers, are removed. Acceptability: Most countries have policies in place to deliver SRMNH care in ways that are sensitive to social and cultural needs. However, data on women's perceptions of midwifery care are scarce, and countries acknowledge the need for more robust research on this topic. Contributors to the SoWMy 2014 workshops noted that the issue of acceptability is strongly linked to discrimination and the status of
women generally, both as service users and health workers. Quality of both care and care providers can be increased by improving the quality of midwifery education, regulation and the role of professional associations. SoWMy 2014 indicates that although the curricula in most countries are appropriate and up-to-date, pervasive gaps
remain in education infrastructure, resources and systems, particularly for direct-entry midwifery programmes. Nearly all of the 73 countries have a regulatory infrastructure for midwifery, with prescribed standards for midwifery education, including in the private sector. Quality of care would be further strengthened by licensing/re-licensing systems that
KEY MESSAGES
The report shows that:
1
The 73 Countdown countries included in the report account for more than 92% OF GLOBAL MATERNAL AND NEWBORN DEATHS AND STILLBIRTHS but have only 42% OF THE WORLD'S MEDICAL, MIDWIFERY AND NURSING PERSONNEL. Within these countries, workforce deficits are often most 92% acute in areas where maternal and newborn mortality rates are highest.
2
ONLY 4 OF THE 73 COUNTRIES have a midwifery workforce that is able to meet the universal need for the 46 essential interventions for sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health.
3
Countries are endeavouring to expand and deliver equitable midwifery services, but COMPREHENSIVE, DISAGGREGATED DATA for determining the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of the midwifery workforce ARE NOT AVAILABLE.
4
5
Midwives who are educated and regulated to international standards can provide 87% OF THE ESSENTIAL CARE needed for women and newborns.
In order for midwives to work effectively, FACILITIES NEED TO BE EQUIPPED TO OFFER THE APPROPRIATE SERVICES, including for emergencies (safe blood, caesarean sections, newborn resuscitation).
6
Accurate data on the midwifery workforce enable countries to plan effectively. This requires A MINIMUM OF 10 PIECES OF INFORMATION THAT ALL COUNTRIES SHOULD COLLECT: headcount, percentage time spent on SRMNH, roles, age distribution, retirement age, length of education, enrolments into, attrition and graduation from education, and voluntary attrition from the workforce.
7
Legislation, regulation and licensing of midwifery allow midwives to provide the high-quality care they are educated to deliver and thus protects women’s health. High-quality midwifery care for women and newborns saves lives and CONTRIBUTES TO HEALTHY FAMILIES AND MORE PRODUCTIVE COMMUNITIES.
8
The returns on investment are a “best buy”: Investing in midwifery education, with deployment to community-based services, could yield a 16-FOLD RETURN ON INVESTMENT in terms of lives saved and costs of caesarean sections avoided, and is A “BEST BUY” IN PRIMARY HEALTH CARE. •
Investing in midwives frees doctors, nurses and other health cadres to focus on other health needs, and contributes to achieving a grand convergence: reducing infections, ENDING PREVENTABLE MATERNAL MORTALITY and ENDING PREVENTABLE NEWBORN DEATHS.
87%
•
EX EC UTIV E S UMMA RY
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require the midwifery workforce to demonstrate continuing professional development. The ultimate goal of professional associations is to foster a dynamic, collaborative, fit-for-purpose, practice-ready team of health-care professionals who are responsive to the needs of women and children. Although almost all countries have at least one professional association for midwives, nurse-midwives or auxiliary midwives, their role in quality improvement could be strengthened if they were enabled to contribute to policy discussions and key decisions affecting midwifery services.
Midwives can offer woman-centred and supportive care that goes beyond childbirth. (World Vision/ Sopheak Kong)
There are substantial gaps in effective coverage in both the availability and quality dimensions. Reducing these gaps requires the collection and better use of workforce data and leadership to prioritize midwifery and release resources to support workforce and service planning. The minimum 10 data elements required for health workforce planning are: headcount, percentage time spent on SRMNH, roles, age distribution, retirement age, length of education, enrolments into, attrition and graduation from education, and voluntary attrition from the workforce. Midwifery2030: Quality midwifery care is central to achieving national and global priorities and
securing the rights of women and newborns. SoWMy 2014 has developed Midwifery2030 as a pathway for policy and planning. Starting from the premises that pregnant women are healthy unless complications, or signs thereof, occur, and that midwifery care provides preventive and supportive care with access to emergency care when needed, it promotes womancentred and midwife-led models of care, which have been shown to generate greater benefits and cost savings than medicalized models of care. Midwifery2030 focuses on increasing the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of health services and health services and health providers to achieve the three components of universal health coverage (UHC): reaching a greater proportion of women of reproductive age (increasing coverage); extending the basic and essential health package (increasing services); while protecting against financial hardship (increasing financial protection). Central to this are an enabling policy environment that supports effective midwifery education, regulation and association development, and an enabling practice environment that provides access to effective consultation with and referral to the next level of SRMNH services. This should be underpinned by effective management of the workforce, including professional development and career pathways. Implementing the recommendations of Midwifery2030 can lead to significant returns on investment. A value for money assessment in Bangladesh reviewing the education and future deployment of 500 community-based midwives ranked positively for economy, efficiency and effectiveness. The assessment calculated a beneficial impact comparable to that of child immunization, with a 16-fold return on investment and confirms that midwifery is a “best buy” in primary health care. Essential building blocks for putting the Midwifery2030 vision into practice include political will, effective leadership and midwifery “champions” who will drive the agenda, supported by the current regional and international momentum for improvements to SRMNH.
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T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Photo here
In September 2013, United Nations SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon presented his annual report on progress towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to the United Nations General Assembly [1]. His report, A life of dignity for all, calls for all countries and the international community at large to do everything possible to achieve the MDGs by the end of 2015 and to work towards the development and adoption of a post-2015 agenda based on the principles of universality, leaving no one behind. It identifies an emerging vision that includes every woman and girl having “equal access to health services, including sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights”, as part of the increasing momentum to realize “universal health-care coverage, access and affordability”, for example, in resolutions adopted by the World Health Assembly [2] and United Nations General Assembly [3].
• inform negotiations for and preparation of the post-2015 development agenda.
This report, The State of the World’s Midwifery 2014 (SoWMy 2014), takes inspiration from the United Nations Secretary-General’s above-mentioned call to action, as well as his Every Woman Every Child initiative, launched in 2010 [4]. SoWMy 2014’s main objective, as agreed at the 2nd Global Midwifery Symposium held in Kuala Lumpur in May 2013 [5], is to provide an evidence base on the state of the world’s midwifery in 2014 that will:
SoWMy 2014 focuses on the 75 lowmidwifery services in all and middle-income countries that regions of the world. are included in the “Countdown to 2015” reports (hereafter Countdown) [8]. 73 countries agreed to contribute to the preparation of SoWMy 2014; Equatorial Guinea and the Philippines were unable to contribute due to emergency and scheduling commitments. SoWMy 2014 adds detailed information on the midwifery workforce and enabling environment in each country to inform national efforts to achieve universal, sustained and equitable coverage of the essential interventions [9] in sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health (SRMNH) [10] that are proven to save women’s and children’s lives.
Partners at the 2nd Global Midwifery Symposium reaffirmed that the returns on investing in a proficient, motivated and supported midwifery workforce are enormous, and they committed to improving midwifery services in all regions of the world [5]. Specifically they committed to “improve the data collection and evidence base for Partners at the 2nd Global Midwifery midwifery and identify actions to address the context-specific barriers Symposium reaffirmed to midwifery services within counthat the returns on tries”. This report responds to that investing in a proficient, commitment by updating the 2011 motivated and supported report, which has proved to be a midwifery workforce valuable source of evidence and tool are enormous, and they for advocacy [7].
committed to improving
• support policy dialogue between governments and their partners; • accelerate progress on the health MDGs; • identify developments in the three years since SoWMy 2011 was published [6];
C H A PTER 1: INTROD UC TION
1
Preparations included collating updated data on the midwifery workforce*, midwifery education, regulation, professional associations, policy and planning frameworks, and progress since 2011. Where feasible, participating countries hosted a policy workshop exploring barriers, challenges and solutions to the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality (AAAQ) of midwifery services, and in particular the midwifery workforce. For this reason, the preparation of this report has been in many countries an important element of the national effort to improve women’s and newborn infants’ (hereafter: newborns) access to competent health professionals. Figure 1 illustrates a selection of key indicators for the 73 countries included in the report.
* The SoWMy survey requested countries to submit data on all professional, associate professional and other health cadres engaged in the provision of maternal and newborn health care (whether they work in the public or private sectors). Data should however be considered as indicative of those working in the public sector.
FIGURE 1
What is midwifery? SoWMy 2014 looks at the inequitable state of the world shown in Figure 1 through the lens of midwifery [17]. The definition of “midwifery” used in this report is: the health services and health workforce needed to support and care for women and newborns, including sexual and reproductive health and especially pregnancy, labour and postnatal care. This
Key indicators for maternal and newborn health and the health workforce in 73 of 75 Countdown countries
73
96%
countries carry
And produce
global burden of maternal mortality
78%
of the world’s total births per year
with less than
Percentage of births attended by skilled attendant <20% 20% - 49% 50% - 74% 75% - 94% 95% or over
2
As shown in Figure 1, more than 92% of all maternal and newborn deaths and stillbirths [11–13] occur within these 73 countries. They are home to women giving birth to 107 million babies per year, making up 78% of the world’s total births in 2009. Yet the number of deaths in these countries is 96% of the global burden of maternal mortality, 91% of stillbirths and 93% of newborn mortality [11–15]. The Global Health Observatory indicates that only 42% of the world’s medical, midwifery and nursing personnel are available in these 73 countries [16].
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
91%
global burden of stillbirths
42%
93%
global burden of neonatal mortality
of the world’s midwives, nurses and physicians
includes a full package of sexual and reproductive health services, including preventing mother-tochild transmission of HIV, preventing and treating sexually transmitted infections and HIV, preventing pregnancy, dealing with the consequences of unsafe abortion and providing safe abortion in circumstances where it is not against the law. This definition is wider than, for example, the Medical Subject Headings definition, introduced in 1966, which simplifies midwifery to “the practice of assisting women in childbirth” [18]. This report emphasizes that midwifery involves far more than the care of the mother during childbirth: it promotes woman-centred care and the well-being of women more generally [19–21] through a supportive and preventive model of care [22,23]. Note that the terms “woman-centred care” and the “wellbeing of women” include, at appropriate times, the mother and her newborn child. The report generally uses the term “midwife” to include those health professionals who are educated to undertake the roles and responsibilities of a midwife regardless of their educational pathway to midwifery, whether direct-entry or after basic nursing. This is aligned with the recommendations and standards of the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) [24-27] and the position statement of the International Council of Nurses (ICN) [28]. For example, ICM’s Essential competencies for basic midwifery practice asks the questions “What is a midwife expected to know?” and “What does a midwife do?” and acknowledges that, a midwife acquires her/his knowledge and skills through different educational pathways [26]. Where differentiation is required for analysis and explanation, for instance in Chapter 2 on the percentage of time spent providing maternal and newborn health services or on education pathways, the report uses the titles of midwife and nurse-midwife. The vocabulary of midwifery and its use in different regions of the world and in different languages is not without complexity. For instance, not all languages have a word that literally translates as mid-wife (i.e. to be “with woman”). SoWMy 2014
does not seek to promote one definition over another, nor to prescribe how countries, languages, professional associations and/or others define or refer to midwifery services and the midwifery workforce. The priority is to contribute to the evidence base — using terms that enable comparison across regions and countries — which can inform new policy dialogue and action in support of quality midwifery services and the rights of women and their newborns to obtain quality health care.
Every woman and girl should have equal access to sexual and reproductive health services. (ICM/Liba Taylor)
About this report ICM, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the World Health Organization (WHO) co-chaired the development and launch of SoWMy 2014, with UNFPA and WHO coordinating on behalf of the H4+ agencies (UNAIDS, UNFPA, UNICEF, UN Women, WHO and the World Bank). Fourteen partners were convened through a Steering Committee (see acknowledgements). ICS Integrare, a UNFPA Implementing Partner, managed the secretariat for the Steering Committee, and led the data collection, research, writing and production of this report with support from the University of Southampton (UK), the University of Technology, Sydney (Australia) and other partners (see acknowledgements). Government representatives in each of the 73 countries collaborated with UNFPA/WHO country offices and development partners in
C H A PTER 1: INTROD UC TION
3
completing a questionnaire available in English, French and Spanish with national stakeholders and experts. Data collection took place between October 2013 and February 2014. Of the 73 countries, 37 convened a workshop, engaging more than 500 participants in policy dialogue, including staff from ministries of health and education, health-care professional associations, regulatory bodies and medical, midwifery and nursing schools (see page 198 for a list of all contributors). UNFPA/WHO country offices submitted the completed questionnaire and workshop reports on behalf of countries to the secretariat through an online platform. The data collection and the report have been made possible through the contributions of many individuals and organizations. Their willingness to convene, collect, collate and analyse the data demonstrates the global commitment to midwifery. However, the report recognizes there are inherent limitations in a multi-country study, not least the gaps in available data in many countries. That absence of data is itself a finding that presents national partners with the opportunity to take immediate action. Examples of how this spurred action in Afghanistan, Sierra Leone and Togo are provided in Box 6 in Chapter 2. Notwithstanding the limitations, the report Midwives can offer woman-centred and supportive care that goes beyond childbirth. (UNICEF/Shehzad Noorani)
provides new analysis and evidence to inform policy, planning and implementation: • Chapter 2 updates the evidence base and provides a detailed analysis of efforts to improve the quality of midwifery in the 73 countries; • Chapter 3 explores the future challenges and opportunities facing midwifery and proposes a people-centred, woman-focused vision that can accelerate progress on universal access by 2030; • Chapter 4 includes two-page “policy briefs” for each of the 73 countries. The policy briefs are an innovative mix of 2012 data and needs-based projections for the period to 2030. Health workforce projections have been described as “a policy-making necessity” [29]. Their purpose in the briefs, mirroring previous needs-based projections on the workforce requirements to deliver priority services [30–33], is to inform policy dialogue and decisions within countries on “what actions need to be taken in the near future” [29]. All needs-based projections are sensitive to the quality of data informing them and a global modelling exercise has limitations due to the standard, evidencebased parameters employed [34]. In particular, the projections are based on the rational assumption that human resources are allocated efficiently. This may not reflect the reality in a country. The briefs should therefore be used, not as a fact-sheet, but as a tool to review and improve the quality of data and policy options within countries, enabling further identification and analysis of disaggregated data to improve needs-based modelling and costing exercises. This report (in pdf, E-pub and Kindle formats) and additional information are available online at www.sowmy.org. Additional information includes the data collection instruments and the guidance given to country teams, workshop reports, and supporting background papers. An advocacy and communications toolkit on how to use the report to inform policy dialogue at the country level is also available (in English, French and Spanish).
4
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
CHAPTER 2
THE STATE OF MIDWIFERY TODAY Evidence of progress This chapter contains a broad assessment of the state of the worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s midwifery, including an account of progress since SoWMy 2011. The chapter is based mainly on 73 country responses to the SoWMy survey, as well as records of the national workshop discussions. The resulting analysis gives an in-depth description of what women and newborns need in the 73 countries, the characteristics of the workforce that should serve them and a detailed breakdown of what is actually available to those in need. Also included is a new assessment of the gaps in and challenges to expanding effective coverage of the 46 essential interventions in SRMNH recommended by the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health [1] (see Annex 4). Much has happened in the three years since the launch of SoWMy 2011. Although MDG 5* will not be reached in many countries by 2015 (19 countries have achieved this ahead of 2015 [2]), maternal mortality decline is now an established feature of development. All but 1 of the 73 countries that completed the 2014 survey have made progress in reducing their maternal mortality ratios, with an average annual rate of reduction of 3% since 1990 [2]. One reason for this progress is that many low-income countries have improved access to midwifery care [3]. Building on these success stories, it is widely recognized that more needs to be done * MDG 5A: to reduce by three quarters, between 1990 and 2015, the maternal mortality ratio; and MDG 5B: to achieve, by 2015, universal access to reproductive health. ** MDG 4A: to reduce by two thirds, between 1990 and 2015, the under-five mortality rate.
to strengthen midwifery in order to come closer to (and eventually achieve) maternal survival targets and universal access to reproductive health, not only those articulated in MDG 5, but also those that may be set in the future (e.g. the Ending Preventable Maternal Mortality by 2030 targets [4] and/or achieving universal access to sexual and reproductive health and rights). It is also recognized that reducing newborn mortality is key to achieving MDG 4**; all but 4 of the 73 SoWMy countries have made progress, with an average annual rate of reduction of 1.9% since 1990 [5]. The 2014 Every Newborn: An action plan to end preventable deaths [6] is a roadmap for change. It provides guidance on interventions that have the highest impact - with a triple return on maternal and newborn mortality, and stillbirths [7,8]. The plan is in accordance with the principles of universal health coverage [9] and calls for qualified and dedicated midwifery personnel to provide services. High-quality sexual and reproductive health for women, adolescents, pregnant women and their infants is an essential feature of UHC [10] and therefore implies the development of midwifery services, a midwifery workforce and an enabling environment that is fit for this purpose.
Bold steps since 2011 Tangible progress has been made in improving midwifery in many countries since the SoWMy 2011 report, which outlined a series of bold steps to be taken by governments, regulatory bodies, midwifery and nursing schools, professional associations and international agencies. Analysis of updates from the 73 countries participating in
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
5
TABLE 1
ACTIONS reported by countries that relate to the BOLD STEPS identified in SoWMy 2011 BOLD STEPS RECOMMENDED
ACTIONS TAKEN SINCE 2011
By governments (including ministries of health and finance and other government departments and leaders)
Promote midwifery as a career with appropriate terms of service. Include midwifery and midwives in costed MNH plans, and align human resources for health plans. Assure management competencies tools and procedures for appropriate human resource management. Invest in active data collection and monitoring of the practising midwifery/ MNH workforce. •
Establish criteria for entry into the profession. Establish educational standards and practice competencies. Accredit schools and education curricula in both public and private education systems. License and relicense midwives. Maintain codes of ethics/conduct. •
Review curricula to ensure that graduates are proficient in all essential competencies set by government and the regulatory body. Use the ICM and other education standards to improve quality and capacity. •
Promote standards for in-service training and knowledge updates. Ensure respect of patients’ rights in service delivery. Develop the voice of and contributions by the midwifery workforce in the national policy arena. •
Encourage international forums and facilitate exchanges of knowledge, good practices and innovation. Encourage the establishment of a global agenda for midwifery research (for the MDGs and beyond) and support its implementation at country level. •
• •
•
•
By regulatory bodies • • • • •
By schools and training institutions •
•
By professional associations • • •
By international organizations, global partnerships, donor agencies and/or civil society •
•
•
•
•
Promotion of midwifery at higher education levels to increase career prospects, reported by 6 countries (8%). 18 countries (25%) report increased production of health workers (including midwives) to reduce shortages and/or deficits; 12 (16%) have opened new midwifery schools and programmes; 8 countries (11%) report new programmes, mostly direct-entry midwifery. 33 countries (45%) report vigorous attempts to improve retention in remote areas, including the introduction of a bonding system and/ or incentives. 52 countries (71%) report that they have data information systems. Actions in data collection include: capacity building with external technical and financial support, establishment of information coordinating bodies, revision of data tools, recruitment of data specialists, and establishment of information centres. In addition, 5 countries (7%) report that they plan to establish information systems or update existing ones.
•
51 countries (70%) report that regulatory bodies are responsible for setting education standards, and 39 (53%) report that they are responsible for the accreditation of education providers. Revision of code of practice, putting in place new legislation and/or establishing mechanisms for relicensing reported by 14 countries (19%).
•
19 countries (26%) report that tools and guidelines are being developed. The majority of these relate to competencies, development or updates of curricula and revision of codes of practice. 8 countries (11%) have made positive efforts to align education with ICM global standards.
•
•
•
•
Survey countries report that 92% of associations are performing continuous professional development. 88% of associations in survey countries are reported to advise their members on quality standards for SRMNH care. Survey countries report that 77% of professional associations have advised the government on the most recent national SRMNH or health policy document, and 53% have negotiated work or salary issues with their government.
•
6
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
Second Global Midwifery Symposium (May 2013) brought together midwives, policymakers, and representatives of non-governmental organizations, donor partners and civil society, to discuss various issues around midwifery strengthening, showcase results and innovations and address challenges. Lancet Special Issue on Midwifery (June 2014): aims to consolidate and improve the available knowledge on midwifery to facilitate evidence-based decision-making at country level in support of effective SRMNH services. The H4+ including UNFPA and WHO, is providing technical support to regions and countries on midwifery workforce assessments, quality of care and national policy. Civil society organizations are active participants in global, regional and national forums.
dinating bodies and information centres, and the recruitment of data specialists.
this report shows that many of these steps have been and are continuing to be taken (see Table 1). For example, 33 of the 73 countries (45%) report vigorous attempts to improve workforce retention in remote areas since 2011. 20 countries (28%) have started to increase recruitment and deployment of midwives, 13 countries (18%) have prepared plans to establish regulatory bodies, and 14 (20%) have a new code of practice and/or regulatory framework. Perhaps the most impressive collective step forward since 2011 is the improvement in workforce data, information and accountability, reported by 52 countries (71%). This includes the establishment of information coor-
Table 1 complements the evidence that the 2011 report has contributed to changing narratives about the role of midwifery [11], and there are concrete examples (see Box 1) of political support followed by policy and programme development at national level in collaboration with governments, health-care professional associations, education institutions, regulatory bodies and development partners. Updating the midwifery data from the 58 countries that participated in the 2011 report is an important objective of this report, in part because it contributes to a global emphasis on
BOX 1
Three-year direct-entry midwifery education introduced as Bangladesh recognizes professional midwives The Government of Bangladesh made headlines in 2010 when the Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina demonstrated her political commitment to midwifery by launching the training of 3000 midwives. This was a step change for Bangladesh which in the 1980s had focused attention on traditional birth attendants, and subsequently promoted a wide range of cadres including family welfare visitors, nurse-midwives and doctors. Bangladesh has recently moved to a three-year direct-entry midwifery education programme, in recognition of the value of professional midwives in reducing maternal and newborn mortality. Bangladesh is on track to reach MDGs 4 and 5, yet the Demographic Health Survey 2011 reports the maternal mortality ratio is still high at 194 per 100,000 live births, the neonatal mortality rate is 32 per 1000 and only 32% of women are attended during birth by a skilled birth attendant. This reflects a severe shortage of skilled midwifery personnel, and an extreme concentration of doctors in urban areas.
In 2008 the government Directorate of Nursing Services and the Bangladesh Nursing Council, with technical assistance from WHO, jointly developed â&#x20AC;&#x153;Strategic directions for enhancing the contribution of nurse-midwives for midwifery services to contribute to the attainment of MDGs 4 and 5â&#x20AC;?. This document clearly defined two pathways for the training of midwives through the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare: (i) Certificate in Midwifery: a six-month advanced midwifery programme for existing registered nurse-midwives; (ii) Diploma in Midwifery: a new three-year direct-entry midwifery programme. WHO provided the government with the technical assistance to develop the six-month post basic course curriculum, as well as the new threeyear diploma curriculum and UNFPA provide additional financial and technical assistance. UNFPA and WHO are supporting 20 training centres for the Certificate in Midwifery programme based in existing Nursing Institutes and
Education centres, and the 27 Institutes providing the three-year direct-entry diploma are government funded through the multi-donor Health, Population and Nutrition Sector Development Programme. Key challenges remain. There is an acute shortage of competent teaching staff in both public and private sectors. The process of sanctioning new public sector midwife positions is underway, but needs approval to ensure the diploma midwives can practise. Coordination between the public and private sectors is essential. Importantly, much more needs to be done to provide the professional, economic and sociocultural support to enable these graduate midwives to provide the quality of care that they are committed to achieving. Bangladesh is an example of political commitment to midwifery, joint agency support to government, and public-private enterprise.
Source: UNFPA and WHO.
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
7
information and accountability [12]. But SoWMy 2014 and this chapter do more than follow up on progress. An additional 15 countries have been added to align with the Countdown countries and, more importantly, the data provided by all participating countries are more detailed than in 2011 and represent a major step forward in our understanding of the midwifery workforce and their roles and responsibilities in providing SRMNH services.
What women and newborns need In the 73 countries included in this report the annual number of pregnancies is reasonably stable at around 160 million per year [13,14].
Number of pregnancies (thousands)
FIGURE 2
Pregnancies in 73 countries (1950-2099)
180,000 160,000 140,000 120,000 100,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 0 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070 2080 2090 2099 Africa
FIGURE 3
South-east Asia
Western Pacific
Eastern Mediterranean
Americas
Europe
Number of sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health visits needed, by WHO region (2012)
This looks set to continue for many decades (see Figure 2). However, strikingly different demographic trends are seen between world regions. Since 1990 the annual number of pregnancies has increased by 50% across African countries, which means the midwifery workforce in these countries needs to increase significantly just to maintain current levels of population coverage. In order to increase coverage of services and accelerate reductions in mortality and morbidity the workforce needs an even faster increase in supply of staff as well as new thinking on skill-mix and improvements in efficiency. By contrast, Asian countries are seeing reductions in the annual number of pregnancies which should allow them to determine how best to address inequitable population coverage and health outcomes, optimize the skill mix in the midwifery workforce and scale up woman-centred services. Projections and estimations of where pregnancies are occurring allow for a more accurate assessment of what SRMNH care is needed by women, adolescents and newborns, but this needs to be tailored to demographic and epidemiological contexts. For example, the impact of HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections will require additional counselling, testing and treatment, which has implications for both the number and skillmix of providers. Figure 3 shows an estimate of what midwifery services women and newborns need, based on recommended coverage [1] for: family planning, antenatal care (at least 4 visits), skilled birth attendance and postnatal care (at least 4 visits) in the 73 countries.
1,400 Number of visits (millions)
1,200 1,000 800 600 400 200 0
Africa
Reproductive health visits
8
Eastern Mediterranean Antenatal visits
Europe
Americas Skilled birth attendance
South-east Asia
Western Pacific
Postnatal visits
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;S MIDWIF E RY 2014
From the number of visits, an additional calculation estimates the total need for the package of 46 essential SRMNH interventions and multiplies this by the time required to provide those interventions, as estimated by One Health [15] and experts. This enables the need for interventions to be translated into need for the midwifery workforce. Midwives, when educated and regulated to international standards, e.g. ICM and WHO [1620] have the competencies to deliver 87% of the estimated need in the 73 countries.
Universal access to sexual and reproductive health care and reductions in maternal and newborn mortality are included in the MDG targets. This report explores the extent to which a country’s midwifery workforce has the capacity to facilitate universal access to the 46 essential interventions for SRMNH by reference to the concept of effective coverage (see Box 2). Effective coverage is defined as the proportion of the population who need an intervention, receive that intervention and benefit from it [21,22]. It can be measured by the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of health services and of the personnel providing those services. Chapter 2 uses these four dimensions to examine the readiness of the midwifery workforce to deliver universal access.
What is the midwifery workforce? Participating countries provided highly detailed information on the health workers engaged in the midwifery workforce. This includes new data on cadre names, the percentage of available working time [33] spent on SRMNH services, official roles and responsibilities, and length of education. The data demonstrate extensive cross-country variation between country cadres with similar names. Simple approaches such as the classification of skilled birth attendants according to cadre name may therefore prove ineffective. The 381 different cadres specified by countries were grouped into eight broad categories: midwives, nurse-midwives, nurses, auxiliaries (midwives and nurses), associate clinicians, physician generalists and obstetricians/gyn-
Midwifery workforce: Projected need of full-time equivalent workers to deliver sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health services
Sexual and reproductive health Full-time equivalent workers needed per 10,000 women of reproductive age
Towards universal access
FIGURE 4
14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0
Africa
Eastern Mediterranean
Europe
Americas
WHO region
South-east Asia
Family planning advice
Family planning delivery
Prevention STIs
Prevention HIV
Management HIV
Other reproductive health
Western Pacific
Management STIs
Maternal and newborn health 6
Full-time equivalent workers needed per 1,000 pregnancies
There is significant diversity across countries and regions in the scale and distribution of need per women of reproductive age or per pregnancy, due to different epidemiological and demographic profiles. The diversity across regions is shown in Figure 4 for both a) sexual and reproductive health services and b) maternal and newborn health services.
5 4 3 2 1 0
Africa
Eastern Mediterranean
Post-partum and postnatal
Europe
Birth
Americas
WHO region
South-east Asia
Western Pacific
Pregnancy
aecologists. These categories are constructed exclusively using each country cadre’s name, and are not a statement about cadres’ professional recognition, roles or educational pathway. The rest of this chapter focuses analysis on the eight broad categories, not the individual names provided by countries. Countries also reported on non-professional cadres: 47 countries (64%) reported the availability of community health workers (CHWs) and 20 (27%) reported the availability of traditional birth attendants (TBAs). The role of CHWs in delivering some of the essential SRMNH interventions
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
9
at community level, especially in sexual health, family planning and postnatal care, is known to improve coverage and is a viable strategy as part of an integrated health service delivery network [34]. Midwives in 58 countries (79%) supervise CHWs’ and TBAs’ work concerning SRMNH, suggesting links between health facilities and the community, with opportunities to promote the
continuum of care and to improve demand for and utilization of services. However, lack of data, combined with inconsistencies in typology, duration of training, roles and proportion of available working time spent on SRMNH services, limits a comparable, cross-country analysis in this report but would be a valuable addition in future health policy and systems research.
BOX 2
Examining the midwifery workforce through the lens of effective coverage The concept of “effective coverage” was developed by WHO in the 1970s to explore the delivery of health services. In 1978 T. Tanahashi published a conceptual framework in the Bulletin of the WHO [23], which captured the simple logic of how the domains of availability, accessibility, acceptability and the effectiveness of the contact between the service provider and the user (i.e. quality) influences whether the population obtains health services that meet their requirements. Tanahashi argued that the simplicity of the logic could be applied to consider the effective coverage of all health services, or particular services and components of service delivery: for example SRMNH services and the midwifery workforce.
General Comment No. 14 [24] on the right to health, published in 2000, mirrored the Tanahashi domains of availability, accessibility and acceptability with quality as the fourth domain (AAAQ). Article 12 states that “the right to health in all its forms and at all levels contains the following interrelated and essential elements, the precise application of which will depend on the conditions prevailing in a particular State party”, before listing each of the AAAQ domains and the obligations for all States. The use of the AAAQ domains is therefore of immediate value for exploring effective coverage, and also reinforces the right to health.
The use of the Tanahashi framework to explore human resources for health, and the AAAQ of the health workers who are at the core of service delivery, is enabling new policy insights across countries [25–28]. Similar insights have been achieved when analysing SRMNH services [22,29,30] and the midwifery workforce [31]. New opportunities have thus been created to review barriers, challenges and opportunities in the delivery of effective coverage and are complementary to similar domains to measure quality of care in health systems [32]. The figure below illustrates the need to focus on measuring whether women obtain health services in relation to need and how the AAAQ of the midwifery workforce influences this. This logic underpins the discussion in chapters 2 and 3.
Effective coverage as applied to SRMNH services and the midwifery workforce CRUDE COVERAGE
NEED
AVAILABILITY
ACCESSIBILITY
ACCEPTABILITY
EFFECTIVE COVERAGE
QUALITY
OUTCOME
SRMNH services provide QUALITY CARE?
Outcomes are subject to the reductions in the AAAQ of SRMNH services
• How many women of reproductive age? • How many pregnancies per year?
SRMNH services are AVAILABLE?
SRMNH services are ACCESSIBLE?
SRMNH services are ACCEPTABLE?
IMPACT
Add the dimension of people-centred, woman-focused care, with professional teamwork and an enabled environment
• A midwife is avail-
Woman of reproductive age seeking support through reproductive health, pregnancy, labour and birth, & postnatal follow-up
•
able in or close to the community As part of an integrated team of professionals, lay workers and community health services
• Woman attends
• A midwife is available • As needed
• Financial protection ensures no barriers to access
• Woman attends • A midwife is available
• As needed • Providing
respectful care
Source: Jim Campbell, ICS Integrare. Adapted from Campbell et al, 2013 [25] Colston, 2011 [22].
10
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
• Woman attends
• Woman obtains
antenatal care increased
•
postnatal care increased
• A midwife is available • As needed • Providing
respectful care
• Competent and
enabled to provide quality care
quality care for all SRMNH services She and her baby receive quality, follow-up postnatal care
maternal mortality reduced neonatal mortality reduced
Figure 5 shows the distribution of the midwifery workforce, in 73 countries and in each WHO region, by category of health worker (excluding community cadres). This figure makes the crucial point that the percentage of time spent by each cadre on SRMNH should be taken into account when determining which cadres deliver midwifery services. Generalist physicians and generalist nurses make up a large proportion of the midwifery workforce in terms of headcount, but their contribution as full-time equivalents is reduced when multiplied by the percentage of time spent on SRMNH. Figure 5 also shows the radically different composition of the midwifery workforce in different WHO regions, although the small number of countries in some regional groups, as well as the influence of China in the Western Pacific Region and India in the South-East Asia Region, should be noted. For example, there appear to be more midwives in the African Region, the European Region and the South-East Asia Region than in the other three regions.
Midwifery workforce: Distribution in 73 countries, and by WHO region
FIGURE 5
GLOBALLY Midwifery workforce in 73 countries by cadre: TOTAL HEADCOUNT
Another point of diversity is the extent to which each country cadre is responsible for carrying out
FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT ON MATERNAL AND NEWBORN HEALTH
5%
16%
22%
23% 9%
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
73 2%
381
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
73
3%
NUMBER OF CADRES
NUMBER OF CADRES
14%
338*
36%
5%
22%
30%
REGIONALLY FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT
1% 5%
7%
8% 7%
18% 12%
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
40
5
10
NUMBER OF CADRES
25%
NUMBER OF CADRES
188
NUMBER OF CADRES
22
50
8%
40%
2%
12%
37%
EUROPE
28% MEDITERRANEAN
43%
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
23%
11%
EASTERN
AFRICA
5%
7%
1% 2% 2% 1%
10%
24%
There is remarkable diversity across country cadres and within broad categories, particularly with respect to the percentage of time spent on the MNH component of SRMNH services, roles and responsibility, and length of education. Most country cadres in the categories for midwives, nurse-midwives, auxiliaries and obstetricians/ gynaecologists spend 100% of their time on MNH. However, in no broad category were all country cadres spending 100% time on MNH, even among specialists. A much larger range exists for the generalists reported as operating within the midwifery workforce: nurses and generalist physicians spend 5 to 100% of their time on MNH, with nurses spending an average of 50% and generalist physicians an average of 39% of their time. This is linked to the range of responsibilities they hold, for instance in prevention, management and treatment of illness and disease.
Midwifery workforce in 73 countries by cadre:
6%
4%
5%
8% 29%
AMERICAS NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
SOUTH-EAST ASIA
17%
6
6
26
57%
18%
NUMBER OF CADRES
27
WESTERN PACIFIC NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
NUMBER OF CADRES
27%
45%
39%
6
0.5% 3%
NUMBER OF CADRES
25
10%
1% 1%
Midwives
Nurse-midwives
Physicians (general)
Nurses
Auxiliaries
0.3%
Associate clinicians
Obstetricians/gynaecologists
* Full-time equivalent figures do not include those 11% of country cadres for which percentage time spent on MNH was not reported.
tasks within the scope of midwifery practice. The task analysis in Figure 6 follows the International Labour Organizationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s (ILO) guidance embodied in the International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO) [35] (see Annex 5) regarding the tasks that are within the scope of midwifery professionals. It reveals that cadre names are not always a good indicator of the way in which roles and responsibilities for midwifery services have been assigned across the workforce in each country. While there are certainly patterns,
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
11
FIGURE 6
Midwifery workforce: roles and tasks
percentage of reported cadres
100% 80% 60% 40%
20% 0%
Midwives
Nursemidwives
Nurses
Auxiliaries Associate Physicians Obstetricians clinicians (general) gynaecologists
Job description includes all midwifery tasks in ISCO 2008 guidance Job description does not include all midwifery tasks in ISCO 2008 guidance
KEY FINDINGS
Evidence of progress
Since the SoWMy 2011 report countries and partners have begun to take bold steps to improve midwifery.
Projected changes in the number of pregnancies per annum provide new insights to inform the composition, skill mix, deployment and efficiency of the midwifery workforce in all regions.
Women’s need for the 46 essential SRMNH interventions can be quantified: in 2012, this is estimated as 3.8 billion visits for family planning, antenatal and postnatal care and 107 million births.
Midwives, when educated and regulated to international standards, have the competencies to deliver 87% of the estimated need in the 73 countries.
Women’s need for sexual and reproductive health care also requires strong linkages with community-based service providers, with supportive supervision from midwives and other health professionals.
Countries should consider the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of the midwifery workforce in order to provide quality SRMNH services.
There is remarkable diversity in the typologies of health workers contributing to the delivery of SRMNH services, including significant differences between national use of cadre names and international standards for roles, education and regulation. Therefore, country cadre names do not form a strong basis for global, cross-country comparison of the midwifery workforce or grouping as skilled birth attendants.
12
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
with midwives and nurse-midwives being more likely than auxiliaries to perform the full scope of midwifery practice, there are also many exceptions. This raises concern about whether ISCO classification, which is used for international comparison, is more often based on countries’ titles and education pathways than on the official roles, responsibilities and tasks within a country. There is also diversity within broad categories in terms of the duration of education and the education pathway. Country cadres within the broad category of midwives, and for whom the total length of clinical education was reported, trained for 1 year to 5 years; at least half trained for 3 years or more. Nurse-midwives trained for 2 to 6 years, with at least half training for 4 years or more. For those cadres that only reported post-nursing or post-college education, length of education for midwives ranged from 1 to 2 years, with at least half training 1.5 years or more, while length of education for nurse-midwives ranged from 1 to 3 years, with at least half training for 2 years or more. Duration of education is relevant to international narratives on educational standards for midwives and nurse-midwives, as duration is linked to the quality and depth of study offered to students, but the data confirm significant differences between national use of cadre names and global standards on midwifery education [16] and regulation [18] and therefore who is entitled to use the term “midwife”.
Availability The first dimension of effective coverage is availability, and is applicable to both midwifery services and the midwifery workforce (see Glossary, Annex 1). The focus in this section is the availability of the midwifery workforce. Availability depends firstly on the headcount of all workers involved in the midwifery workforce. The 73 SoWMy countries reported 7,377,083 workers who spend some proportion of their available working time providing SRMNH
Is this level of availability “enough”? If our goal is to deliver universal access to midwifery services, this question can only be answered with regards to each country’s need for midwifery services. As discussed earlier, the diversity of need, driven by a multiplicity of demographic and epidemiological factors, is not amenable to global benchmarks that promote a minimum number of health workers per 1,000 population, especially when the minimum number is often interpreted as a “target”. Workforce planning in relation to need must account for the country context. A needs-based analysis of the availability of the current and future midwifery workforce has been conducted for each country and is shown in the country briefs in Chapter 4. The reliability of this approach depends on 10 pieces of information that all countries should collect: headcount, percentage time spent on SRMNH, roles, age distribution, retirement age, length of education, enrolments into, attrition and graduation from education, and voluntary attrition from the workforce [36]. Improving availability depends on better understanding and management of new entrants to the workforce and of existing workers who leave the workforce. Managing new entrants to the workforce must imply better management of midwifery education, as this directly determines future availability of the workforce. Enrolment, graduation and student attrition data from coun-
tries are often missing or inconsistent, indicating an apparent disconnect between human resources for health (HRH) management and education planning. Active management of midwifery education involves ensuring that the number of training places available, in both the private and the public sectors, is sufficient and of high enough quality to meet future needs, taking into account student selection and attrition. Management of medical and midwifery education also involves ensuring that sufficient students graduate from secondary school with skills in numeracy, literacy and sciences adequate to enrol in midwifery or medical education programmes. This was seen as a challenge in 78% of midwifery education programmes (49 out of 63). High school graduates must then be motivated to enrol in midwifery education programmes. Lack of information or negative preconceptions about careers in midwifery were reported by 9 out of 21 African countries that held a policy workshop, indicating
Midwifery workforce: headcount versus full-time equivalent
FIGURE 7
8
Midwives Nurse-midwives Nurses Auxiliaries Associate clinicians Physicians (general) Obstetricians/ gynaecologists Note: Full-time-equivalent figures do not include those 11% of country cadres for which percentage time spent on MNH was not reported.
7 Number of midwifery workers (in millions)
care. However, simply correlating the reported headcount of selected cadres with health outcomes (e.g. the headcounts of midwives, nurses and doctors with the number of stillbirths, or maternal and newborn mortality, or women and adolescent girls with unmet need for family planning) is inadequate. Figure 7 shows the difference between assessing the midwifery workforce in terms of headcount versus fulltime-equivalent availability. Among those country cadres for which this information was available, the full-time-equivalent workforce represents less than two thirds of all workers spending at least some time on SRMNH.
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Headcount
Full-time equivalent
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
13
the need for advocacy and better information. Once enrolled, students need practical, sociocultural and often financial support to remain in their education programmes. Workshop reports suggested that improving the quality of education and creating supportive environments, e.g. financial support and gender-sensitivity, could go a long way towards reducing student attrition. Pathways from education programmes to the workforce must also be better managed. Educating health workers for whom there are no jobs, or whose postings are severely delayed, is a poor use of resources. SoWMy data show that in more than half of countries, some graduates take longer than a year to join the workforce (except for obstetricians/gynaecologists) by which time their clinical skills may have deteriorated through lack of application. Workshop reports suggested a range of solutions to this problem, including: recruiting workers before their graduation; decentralizing responsibility for recruitment to subnational authorities; and better funding and enforcement of recruitment policies. Managing exits from the workforce requires a better understanding of the number of workers choosing to leave the workforce every year (see Figure 8). In more than half of such cases, data were missing on voluntary attrition, a significant barrier to understanding the availability
FIGURE 8
Percentage leaving the workforce voluntarily each year, by cadre
Percentage of reported cadres
100 80 60 40
20 0
Midwives
Less than 5%
14
Nursemidwives
Nurses
At least 5%; less than 10%
Auxiliaries
Associate Physicians Obstetricians/ clinicians (general) gynaecologists
At least 10%; less than a quarter
A quarter or more
Missing data
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
of the workforce. In many other cases it is likely that attrition was under-reported [37]. Solutions to attrition discussed during the workshops centred mainly on improving salaries and incentives, management and supervision, and career development pathways, including through additional training. Outflows are also heavily influenced by the age distribution of the current workforce. Although an ageing workforce is most common among obstetricians/gynaecologists, other country cadres such as midwives in Ghana and aides de santé in Guinea suffer from the same problem and will experience high losses in the next 10 years due to retirement. Regrettably, this information was unavailable for 56% of all reported country cadres.
Exploring the availability of midwives Midwives make up 36% of the midwifery workforce across the 73 countries: although a sizeable proportion, they are not the only type of health worker needed to deliver SRMNH services. However, their specific contribution to the physiological process of “normal” birth and their high degree of focus on the SRMNH continuum of care makes them essential. This implies that policymakers should pay specific attention to these cadres within overall workforce planning. Currently, the data show that further progress can be made to encourage students to choose and remain within the profession. In most of the country responses (58%) a career as a midwife is perceived to be more attractive than other professions open to people with a similar level of education (Figure 9), but almost one quarter of countries (23%) see it as less attractive. This indicates that governments, professional associations and advocates need to do more to promote the profession, a “bold step” recommendation in SoWMy 2011. Some countries have taken this step already: • In Cambodia, midwives have been officially recognized as key to the reduction of maternal
• In Tanzania, the White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood has targeted secondary school students, their parents, politicians, and the community in their campaign “Increasing Women’s Access to Healthcare through Promotion of Midwifery as a Career in Tanzania” [38]. Objectives included improving public perception of midwives and promoting midwifery as an attractive career path among secondary school students. Results were promising with 89.4% of students reached in one region saying they would recommend midwifery as a career. In other cases, progress has been made through media and advocacy, for example through the creation of awards recognizing the work of midwives and others, such as the African Union’s Mama Afrika award [39]. Status and identity are known to influence the attractiveness of a profession, partly reflected in the accompanying salary levels within each country. Countries provided detailed information on the starting salaries of health personnel, which were validated using the World Bank database on HRH salaries.* Midwives’ salaries are among the lowest in low- and lower-middle-income countries, and are comparable to auxiliary nurse-midwives’ salaries, although this varies considerably from country to country. On average, midwives are paid more than 2.5 as much in upper-middleincome countries than in lower-income countries (see Figure 10), and in countries where there is a licensing system they are better paid. Other factors associated with higher salaries for midwives include an association active in negotiating employment and salary issues with government.
Perceptions among survey respondents of the comparative attractiveness of a career as a midwife (73 countries)
FIGURE 9
Percentage
MUCH MORE ATTRACTIVE
36%
"Midwives were recently recognized by the government as key health professionals" (Cambodia)
A LITTLE MORE ATTRACTIVE
22%
"Society is recognizing more and more the role of the midwife" (Papua New Guinea)
ABOUT THE SAME
19%
"A profession similar to others, not specific in terms of salary or rank" (Guinea)
19%
"The midwife profession is loved, but the lack of career plans tends to discourage people" (Mauritania)
4%
"Women’s issues are undervalued" (Nepal)
A LITTLE LESS ATTRACTIVE
MUCH LESS ATTRACTIVE
FIGURE 10
Average monthly starting salary per cadre of health worker (international $ purchasing power parity, 2012)
3000
Monthly salary (international $PPP 2012)
and newborn mortality, they received a larger pay increase than other health personnel with a similar professional education, they are financially incentivized for deliveries at public health facilities, and they are given priority when the government recruits civil servants for the Ministry of Health.
Low-income countries 2500
Lower-middle-income countries Upper-middle-income countries
2000
1500
1000
500
0
Obstetricians/ Physicians gynaecologists (general) * Correspondence with Juliette Puret and Christophe Lemière, World Bank.
Nursemidwives
Midwives
Auxiliary nursemidwives
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
Auxiliary midwives
15
KEY FINDINGS
Availability
The availability of the midwifery workforce can only be measured by reference to full-time equivalent not headcount.
Correlating the reported headcount of the midwifery workforce with health outcomes will produce findings that are insensitive to the real availability, as the full-time equivalent midwifery workforce represents less than two thirds of all workers spending at least some time on SRMNH.
Ten pieces of information that all countries should collect on the midwifery workforce, include: headcount, percentage time spent on SRMNH, roles, age distribution, retirement age, length of education, enrolments into, attrition and graduation from education, and voluntary attrition from the workforce.
Midwifery education must be actively managed to ensure that the future workforce meets the needs of future populations.
A career as a midwife is perceived to be more attractive than other professions open to people with a similar level of education, but not in all countries.
Midwivesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; salaries are among the lowest for health-care professionals in low- and lower-middle-income countries.
Accessibility The second dimension is accessibility (see Glossary, Annex 1) of health services and in particular the midwifery workforce. Even if there are enough health workers, adequately remunerated and with the competencies to provide the continuum of care that women and newborns need, accessing the care that they provide remains a problem in many countries. Women need to be active decision-makers on when they choose to access the midwifery workforce (often denied because of gender discrimination) and to be able to reach and afford the care provided, sometimes rapidly during an emergency.
Improving geographical access The first dimension of accessibility is physical reach. An accessible care system is underpinned by an adequate geographical spread of facilities and health workers, backed up by good transport, information and communication networks. Achieving equitable deployment of the workforce depends at the very least on good information and good planning.
16
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;S MIDWIF E RY 2014
In terms of information, only 15 of the 73 countries surveyed provided an accurate, current list of health facilities, of which only 6 included private sector facilities. Only 4 countries reported that they have access to geo-referenced codes for health facilities. The absence of this basic information diminishes the ability to conduct detailed analysis of supply-side constraints to respond to population need. In terms of planning, the government decides how to allocate the midwifery workforce according to both the population level and the types of facilities that exist in that country in 53 of the 73 countries. A further 13 countries base these decisions solely on the types of facilities that exist, and 2 solely on the population level; 4 use other methods and 1 gave no response. However, even where one of these planning approaches was followed, it was difficult for countries to cite the exact norms they were using. Of the 66 countries reporting that midwifery workforce planning is partly premised on the types of facilities that exist, 41 (62%) were able to provide at least some information about the numbers of midwifery workers allocated to each health facility. Of the 55 countries reporting that workforce planning also follows population and population-catchment areas, 39 (71%) provided at least some information about the numbers of health personnel allocated to a certain size of population (e.g. the number of physicians per 100,000 population). Given the wide diversity in some countries on the geographical distribution of need, it may be fruitful to explore the possibility of flexible planning norms at the subnational level, in order to offer the best possible combination of availability, geographical accessibility and quality in each area. These could be informed by the use of an emerging set of methods in geographic information systems (GIS) (see Box 3). Global guidance on accessibility established in 1997 [46] recommends a minimum of five fully functioning emergency obstetric and newborn care (EmONC) facilities per 500,000 population.
BOX 3
The geography of SRMNH: advances in geo-information systems Geographical location is all too often a key determinant of whether a woman and her newborn will survive or thrive. Geographical information has been used to explore health outcomes for hundreds of years. Perhaps the most famous example is John Snow’s epidemiological study of London’s cholera outbreak in 1854, which plotted mortality on a map alongside the cause of the disease. This was one of the earliest examples of “health data visualization”: the conversion of health datasets into figures and graphics to clarify findings for researchers and policymakers. Advances in digital technology, design and data management software are enabling a rapid acceleration in visualization. The use of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) to record locations and GIS techniques to analyse and present data is increasing. This facilitates action on “hardwiring” equity into health services [40], promoting the “fair distribution” of services and affording “priority to the worse off’ [41] i.e. for the women and children most at need.
Building up layers of geographical information for strategic planning LAYER
1
2
Need for midwifery services Recent technical advances in GIS mapping have allowed the production of highresolution datasets depicting population estimates, including live births and pregnancies, in many countries of the world. These maps, based on satellite mapping, census and survey data and shown in each of the 73 country briefs in this report, can provide the basis for strategic intelligence [42] and planning, and provide denominators for subnational indicators to track progress.
Availability of services and human resources Where comprehensive data exist on health facilities they can be used to investigate supply of services. Decentralized and devolved monitoring and planning specific to local needs is enabled by district or facility catchment area data. Flexible context-specific workforce staffing requirements can be calculated that are relevant to population need and specific to the local terrains and geographical features. All countries should therefore seek to develop and maintain an accurate list of all health facilities and health workers with GPS coordinates.
3
Accessibility of services and human resources
4
Quality of services and human resources as measured by outputs and outcomes
Using facility maps in combination with datasets on mapped pregnancies it is possible to estimate numbers of pregnancies within user-defined distances or travel times of any type of facility. Many studies have measured, mapped and modelled travel times to health facilities using a range of different approaches [43–45].
Maternal and neonatal mortality indicators reveal huge disparities between countries. The same is true within countries, although data on this are harder to come by. However, adverse health outcomes (i.e. maternal, perinatal and neonatal mortality) can be extracted from GPS-located data in population censuses, surveys and verbal autopsies to construct outcome maps and inform targeted equity approaches in relation to health needs and the quality of the health workforce at subnational level.
Source: Andy Tatem, Jim Campbell and Zoë Matthews, ICS Integrare and University of Southampton.
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
17
Although this is an established benchmark, improved information on births and pregnancies has led to current discussion about revising these accessibility standards [47]. SoWMy findings indicate that many countries aspire to the EmONC facility readiness benchmarks and designate a high proportion of their facilities as potentially capable of providing EmONC (see Box 4). This highlights the need to encourage national and global discussion on how to improve policy, planning, accessibility and monitoring of life-saving care. More tailored guidance or using basic health geographies such as districts and country-designed benchmarks that are related to the annual volume of pregnancies or both normal and complicated births may assist. The implications of 24-hour services, requiring shifts and rotation of the midwifery workforce, must also be considered to maintain the readiness of EmONC facilities. In the 37 countries which held a policy workshop a number of key challenges to geographical accessibility beyond information and planning were identified, including: health workers preferring not to work in rural areas; poor/expensive transport links to remote areas; insufficient clinic space for women in early labour; and inadequate referral networks. Their suggested solutions included: financial and non-financial incentives for health workers to work in remote/under-served areas; compulsory periods of rural service; improvements to rural facility infrastructure to make rural posting more attractive; addressing the uneven geographical distribution of training institutions; and the provision of maternity homes in hard-to-reach areas. Many of these suggestions are consistent with the evidence base included in WHO guidelines and recommendations [49,50].
Improving economic access Barriers to accessing care go beyond the geographical location of services. Unsurprisingly,
18
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
financial barriers to care are known to have a negative effect on access [51–53]. A very positive finding from the 2014 survey is that 70 of the 73 responding countries have a national “minimum guaranteed benefits package” for SRMNH, defined as “a set of health services that the government has committed itself to making available to all, free at the point of access”. For these countries the package includes a prescribed list of interventions or services as a minimum; others may be added as a part of the package, but the minimum list is guaranteed. The existence of a minimum benefits package does not mean that women and newborns have financial accessibility to all of the essential elements of SRMNH care. Only 2 countries (China and Peru) have a package that includes all 46 essential SRMNH interventions. However, a further 10 countries include all but one or two of the interventions (Brazil, Comoros, Gabon, Guinea, Lesotho, Mexico, Senegal, South Africa, Viet Nam and Zimbabwe) and 45 countries (62%) offer at least 40 of the 46 interventions. Addressing some of the most common gaps in countries’ benefits packages could save lives. Hypertensive disorders, obstructed labour and unsafe abortion have been identified as leading causes of maternal death in developing countries [54]. However, calcium supplementation and low dose aspirin to prevent pre-eclampsia, interventions for cessation of smoking, reduction of malpresentation at term with external cephalic version and safe abortion are included in fewer than half of the countries. Similarly, while preterm birth is a leading cause of newborn death [55], a quarter of countries do not include interventions to prevent preterm birth and protect preterm infants in their minimum benefits package. In particular, use of antenatal corticosteroids to prevent respiratory distress syndrome in preterm infants, continuous positive airway pressure to manage newborns with respiratory distress syndrome, and social support during labour could be included more widely.
BOX 4
Emergency obstetric and newborn care: from designation to readiness Most pregnant and healthy women experience a normal physiologic process and deliver healthy live babies. However, when that process does not follow a normal course, timely access to quality EmONC can become a matter of life and death. EmONC covers a package of life-saving procedures and drugs to treat complications of pregnancy and childbirth. SoWMy 2014 findings indicate that almost half (44%) of country respondents reported that all the health facilities with childbirth services in their country were designated, from a policy and planning perspective, as either comprehensive (C-EmONC) or basic (B-EmONC) (i.e. all hospitals in the country are designated as C-EmONC facilities, and all non-hospitals are designated as B-EmONC facilities). However, designation as an EmONC facility, meaning that the facility could potentially provide emergency life-saving interventions if resourced with the
necessary staff, equipment, drugs and supplies, is often dramatically different from the reality of whether a facility is in a state of readiness and â&#x20AC;&#x153;fully functioningâ&#x20AC;?. For monitoring purposes EmONC is defined by the performance of signal functions. For an EmONC facility to be considered fully functioning, two key aspects are required: 1) it must have performed the 7 basic or the 9 comprehensive EmONC signal functions, and 2) the signal functions must have been performed within the last 3 months. The figure below uses needs assessment data across 11 countries* to show the disparity between readiness and actual provision of basic signal functions, and which signal functions are the most widely performed. It shows that assisted vaginal delivery (AVD) is the least often
performed. Only 43% of health facilities reported a health worker capable of performing AVD via vacuum extraction or using forceps, even fewer (32%) had the minimum requisite equipment and only 14% of health facilities had performed such a procedure in the last 3 months. Countries seeking to expand the volume and quality of EmONC facilities are encouraged to align policy and planning with the global guidelines on EmONC coverage [48]. Designation can be used as a policy tool to prioritize resource allocation and service improvement, consistent with coverage needs. Readiness needs to be actively managed, continuously ensuring that health workers, equipment, drugs and supplies are all available. Monitoring of whether the facility does perform and is fully functioning can then be used as a quality improvement tool to ensure that all women and newborns have timely access if required.
Percentage of facilities in 11 countries ready to perform and which did perform each signal function
Percentage of health facilities
100
80
60
40
20
0 Parenteral antibiotics At least 1 health worker can perform signal function
*
Parenteral uterotonics
Parenteral anticonvulsants
Has mininum requisite drugs/equipment/supplies
Manual removal of placenta
Removal of retained products
Ready to perform signal function
Assisted vaginal delivery
Neonatal resuscitation
Performed signal function in last 3 months
Data from Averting Maternal Death and Disability EmONC Needs Assessments provided by Patricia Bailey.
Source: Patricia Bailey, Averting Maternal Death and Disability.
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Other issues of financial accessibility include: low public awareness of the right to services which are free at the point of access; women’s lack of empowerment when it comes to household budget decisions; costs of services/ items not covered by the country’s benefit package (e.g. transport, drugs); and facilities lacking equipment or supplies to meet demand. Suggested solutions to these financial barriers include: prepayment schemes and safety nets/ social protection; including transport costs within the minimum benefits package; health workers supporting communities to organize cooperative community groups to facilitate transport and share costs; and improving governance, ensuring accountability and voice to clients, and addressing corruption/racketeering, e.g. by improved supervision and monitoring.
Equality of access As well as physical and financial accessibility, many women face additional barriers to accessing midwifery services and the midwifery workforce which relate to their socioeconomic position or cultural group. Rich/poor and urban/rural gaps in access to care are now well documented, and in many contexts gaps are widening [56,57]. Certain regions within a country, or particular marginalized groups such as adolescents, migrants or tribal communities, can also be effectively excluded from care, especially reproductive health care. There is strong commitment to making equity a fundamental part of the post-2015 development agenda. One proposal to measure a country’s progress towards UHC is to track the poorest 40% of the population’s access to essential health services (see Box 5) which include the continuum of SRMNH care.
BOX 5
Reaching the poorest 40% The World Bank and WHO are in process of developing a measurement framework to track country progress towards UHC [58,59], “assessing the aggregate and equitable coverage of health services and financial risk protection.” As part of the proposed framework it is suggested that: All measures should be disaggregated by socioeconomic strata to assess the degree to which service and financial protection coverage are equitably distributed. Disaggregation would permit progress to be measured at the population level (the aggregate goal) and among the poorest 40% of the population (the equity goal). This is consistent with the measurement of equity in the Countdown to 2015 reports.
birth and four or more antenatal care visits for the poorest 40% and the rest of the population in 34 countries, with countries grouped according to coverage levels.
SRMNH coverage for the poorest 40%, grouped by overall coverage rate for 34 countries Poorest 40%
100%
20
Wealthier 60%
Percentage of live births with skilled birth attendant
100%
80%
80%
60%
60%
40%
40%
20%
20%
0%
An equity goal for SRMNH services will pose significant challenges for many countries. The figure below shows the coverage level for skilled attendance at
Only four countries are reaching the equity goal for both indicators (Armenia, Colombia, Dominican Republic and Jordan): these countries have achieved overall coverage of at least 90% and have
Percentage of live births for which mother had at least 4 antenatal visits
0%
Very low
Low
Moderate
High
Very high
Very low
Low
Moderate
High
Very high
Note: The 34 countries have been categorized into 5 groups based on the overall level of skilled birth attendance/ at least 4 antenatal visits nationally: very low (<31%), low (31%-50%), moderate (51%-70%), high (71%-85%) and very high (>85%).
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
KEY FINDINGS
Clearly, strategic intelligence could be used to plan equity-focused approaches. However, not all governments have policy priorities on workforce deployment that are commensurate with population distribution and need; most countries report using facility-based planning (number of health workers per facility type) or workforce to population ratios, which are inconsistent with addressing need and areas of special need or deprivation. An example in Sierra Leone (see Box 6), triggered by discussions in the SoWMy 2014 policy workshop, highlights how countries can take immediate action to improve available data on health facilities and on where the midwifery workforce is actually practising.
very little inequity between the poorest 40% and the rest of the population. One important characteristic of an equity goal is that it is an absolute rather than a relative target: countries with the lowest coverage will need to make the most progress. Analysis across countries with low coverage demonstrates that the recent rate of progress towards higher coverage is very poor [60]. These are countries where the infrastructure is weakest, and attempts to increase coverage of key SRMNH interventions will require sustained investments in the health system and the health workforce. Further, as inequities in coverage reduce, it is important that greater efforts are made to reduce inequities in quality [61,62]. Equity-focused approaches will be required [63–66] targeting the poorest [41,67] if both aggregate and equity goals for SRMNH coverage are to be achieved in the future.
Source: Sarah Neal, Amos Channon and Zoë Matthews, University of Southampton.
Accessibility
Most countries deploy their midwifery workforce using facility-based planning or workforce to population ratios; these may be inconsistent with needs and access to care.
Human resource information systems linked to facility GIS codes would enable new insights into people’s ability to access a skilled and competent health-care provider.
The provision of EmONC services could benefit from new approaches to designate, make ready and monitor those facilities which are capable of providing life-saving care.
Countries are urged to develop a “minimum guaranteed benefits package” for SRMNH, defined as “a set of health services that the government has committed itself to making available to all, free at the point of access”.
70 of the 73 responding countries have a national “minimum guaranteed benefits package”, but there are gaps in the essential interventions.
Many countries will face significant challenges to ensure universal coverage, especially for the poorest 40%.
Equity-focused approaches will be required that target the poorest, if both aggregate and equity goals for SRMNH coverage are to be achieved in the future.
Countries can take immediate action to improve their strategic intelligence on accessibility to the midwifery workforce.
BOX 6
Country actions in Afghanistan, Sierra Leone and Togo The Midwives Association of Afghanistan capitalized on the opportunity presented by the SoWMy 2014 survey to organize two stakeholder workshops for data collection, validation and policy discussion. Plans are already underway for a national SoWMy 2014 launch and dissemination, including round-table policy discussions and media coverage [68]. In Sierra Leone, SoWMy 2014 participants identified poor working conditions, inefficient deployment mechanisms, lack of motivation, and insufficient opportunities for continuous professional development as some of the problems facing the midwifery workforce. A new mapping exercise has been commissioned by the government, in partnership with UNFPA, which will collate bio-data on all practising midwives and the geographic location of the facility they are working in. Togo is another example of how the SoWMy 2014 process has strengthened national dialogue. The Togo Midwives Association coordinated the national workshops [69]. The meetings and discussions brought results in the form of data, and helped to strengthen relationships between the Midwives Association, the Ministry of Health, UNFPA and WHO. Source: UNFPA and ICM.
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
21
Acceptability The third dimension is acceptability (see Glossary, Annex 1). Even if care is available and accessible, effective coverage will be reduced if either the care or the midwifery workforce is unacceptable to women, their families and communities. Despite the rising proportions of women giving birth in facilities with professional health workers, there is evidence that in some instances lack of respectful care continues to be a disincentive to access (see Box 7). Acceptable care requires that all health facilities, goods and services should be respectful of medical ethics and culturally appropriate, i.e. respectful of the culture of individuals of all age groups including adolescents, minorities, peoples and communities [70]. It should be sensitive to gender and life-cycle requirements, as well as being designed to respect confidentiality and improve the health status of those concerned. Improving accept-
ability means listening to the voices of women and their communities, and building their preferences into policy and training initiatives and feedback loops. This aspect of service improvement has historically been lacking in many countries [71] but strategies are now emerging to address the problem. It is difficult to increase acceptability without understanding current public attitudes towards the midwifery workforce and their practice. Just 18 of the 73 responding countries are aware of studies on this in their country. Among these is South Africa, which reported “lack of information or being shouted [at] instead of being given clear information … being turned away from the facilities and delivering at the gate or on the way home … neglect and abandonment during labour or childbirth”. More robust, peer-reviewed research is needed on this important topic. The SoWMy
BOX 7
Respectful care in maternity services White Ribbon Alliance Charter for Respectful Maternity Care All women need and deserve respectful care before, during and after pregnancy and birth. Sadly, in many countries this is not what women are receiving. The Charter for Respectful Maternity Care [72] was developed in 2011 by a group of multiple stakeholders and development partners. The Charter was in response to a 2010 landscape report by Bowser and Hill, Exploring evidence for disrespect and abuse [73], that described seven kinds of disrespect and abuse to which women and their newborns can be subjected. These range from subtle disrespect and humiliation, through abandonment or denial of care, to detention in facilities.
•
Many countries are faced with this issue. Some are taking positive steps to gather new evidence and throw more light on this pervasive barrier to care: A recent study in Kenya by the Heshima project (heshima means dig-
22
finding was consistent across public, private, basic and referral hospitals [76].
•
nified in Kiswahili) found that 20% of women reported feeling humiliated or disrespected during care at childbirth. Correlations were found between the women’s socio-economic status and the different categories of disrespect and abuse, with wealthier women more likely to be detained or asked for bribes, younger women more likely to experience non-confidential care, and the poorest experiencing more abandonment [74]. An assessment of the quality of care in pregnancy and delivery in Kanakapura Taluk, India [75] showed that lack of respect by providers was a strong disincentive to giving birth in a care facility, and that feeling uncomfortable asking questions, being denied a birth companion and lack of support from care providers were strong factors in deterring women from seeking care in the future. 1 in 4 women reported that their provider revealed personal information they did not want others to know. This
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
•
In Tanzania, following a Discrete Choice Experiment, one of the most important factors women identified as influencing their choice of a whether to give birth in a care facility was provider attitude. The authors estimate that improving these facility characteristics would lead to a 43-88% increase in births in care facilities [77]. •
In South Africa women reported not seeking antenatal care because health providers were so rude; they sought attention only when in labour [78]. •
In Peru many women are reluctant to utilize EmONC facilities because they felt service providers paid little attention to their needs and showed little sensitivity to local culture [79].
Source: Zoë Matthews, University of Southampton and Petra ten Hoope-Bender, ICS Integrare.
survey asked for reasons why a woman or girl might be unable to or uncomfortable about seeking care from a midwife; a sample of the responses is provided in Table 2. In responding to the SoWMy survey most countries (79%) stated that policies are in place specifically to address how SRMNH care will be delivered in a way that is sensitive to social and cultural needs, for example in relation to age, ethnicity, religion and language. These include a National Sexual and Reproductive Health Policy (Malawi), the Inclusion Strategy for Gender Equality in the Health Sector (Mozambique) and the Five Year Plan for Reproductive Health (Myanmar). The Afghanistan policy highlights support of gender equality issues and reproductive health and rights, as well as enhancing women’s decision-making role in relation to healthseeking practices. China’s policy notes increased investment in rural and remote regions and an extraordinary commitment to the universal provision of subsidies for all those who give birth in hospitals. In Liberia, the government regards health as a basic human right and aims to ensure every Liberian will have access to
services, regardless of economic status, origin, religion, gender or geographical location. During country workshops the issue of acceptability was strongly linked with (1) women’s role in society (lack of empowerment among and discrimination against women as both service users and service providers) and (2) the attitudes of health-care providers towards service users (care not being provided in a gender- or cultureappropriate way; lack of humane, woman-centred
By providing humane, informed and culturally-sensitive care, midwives can encourage women to seek SRMNH services. (Jhpiego/Kate Holt)
TABLE 2
Reasons why women do not seek care or feel uncomfortable about seeking care REASON
ILLUSTRATIVE QUOTE/EXPLANATION
Social, cultural and religious beliefs and needs are not being met in institutions
Perception that institutions, and the health personnel within them, can be unfriendly or disrespectful of women’s cultural or religious beliefs.
Mothers recognize that midwives are overloaded (including with non-midwifery tasks)
“There is a severe shortage of midwives and the few who are there are overloaded.”
Health system incentives may encourage medicalized care
New financing mechanisms that favour medical interventions can encourage women to use high-level medical services in preference to midwifery care.
Lack of information on the professional role of the midwife
“The general public is unaware of the competency levels of a midwife.”
Where women know about and prefer care by skilled midwives, they still face geographical and financial barriers
“Women will prefer care from a midwife if they are in a position to do so or make choices. Some women are located in remote, hard-to-reach areas and they only have access to traditional birth attendants.”
Midwifery is socially undervalued
In some countries, paying for a doctor is seen to give greater social status to the family than attendance by a midwife.
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
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care). Suggested solutions to these issues include: womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s empowerment by improved education; improved mentoring/supervision of clinicians by regulatory bodies, professional associations and employers; and the inclusion of respectful care and sociocultural sensitivity as part of pre-service and in-service training. This suggests there is a need for further analysis of the gendered role of midwives, building on existing research [80].
Midwives can empower women through education and by providing health-care information. (Jhpiego/Kate Holt)
Improving the acceptability of care can also be tackled by enhancing community voice, promoting client/provider interaction and ensuring accountability for services. Understanding the gaps in care provision, and mobilizing citizens and providers alike to call for greater accountability from local services and governments to deliver on their SRMNH commitments, can help to ensure that the conditions are in place to
deliver quality care. A number of new initiatives have promoted accountability mechanisms at local and national levels (see Box 8).
Quality The fourth dimension is quality (see Glossary, Annex 1). Even if the midwifery workforce are available, accessible and acceptable to the population, poor-quality care can substantially limit their effectiveness. Evidence from settings that have provided 100% institutional care at birth shows that maternal mortality ratios can remain high unless quality is addressed [81]. There are many aspects to quality of care [82] including level of staffing, resources and work environment, and many reasons for variations in quality. The competencies of the workforce are only one component of this. Nonetheless, the midwifery workforce is a valuable starting point for
KEY FINDINGS
Acceptability
24
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;S MIDWIF E RY 2014
More robust research is needed on womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s perceptions of and attitudes towards the midwifery workforce.
Only 18 countries are aware of studies documenting public attitudes towards the midwifery workforce and their practice, which limits the understanding of acceptability.
The issue of acceptability is strongly linked to discrimination against women as both service users and providers. Further analysis on gendered-roles in the midwifery workforce would be valuable.
Countries are developing policies to promote care that is sensitive to social, cultural and traditional needs; these policies need to be implemented and monitored.
Mobilizing citizens and providers to champion greater accountability from local services and governments to deliver on their SRMNH commitments can help to ensure the conditions for delivering quality care.
BOX 8
Ensuring acceptability of service through accountability Increasingly, activists and advocates are seeking to stimulate accountability in the delivery and monitoring of SRMNH services by calling for stronger legal, policy, regulatory, governance and financial environments. SRMNH service delivery improves when communities, clients, providers and health managers work together to review evidence of shortcomings and take action. Maternal Death Surveillance and Response, facility scorecards and client-provider partnerships can build momentum for change In Ethiopia maternal death reviews are seen as a key element of the accountability and response cycle; these form part of a new and expanding system of maternal death surveillance and response for the country. •
In Sierra Leone the death review system is under improvement with the support of the First Lady of Sierra Leone, and a Maternal Survival Network is conducting high-level advocacy to address recommendations arising from national maternal death review data. •
Facility assessments and scorecards are used by health system managers in Sierra Leone and Ghana with civil society stakeholders benchmarking the quality of care provided at their local maternity facilities. Scorecards are used by clients and providers alike to advocate for systemic changes in SRMNH service delivery. •
•
In Malawi the powers of the district level ombudsman’s office have been extended to include the power to report inaction at facility and district levels directly to the Ministry of Health. District ombudsmen’s offices often lack independence from health facilities, although at national level powerful and effective accountability mechanisms exist.
Schoolgirls engage with SRMNH issues in Ghana through the MamaYe campaign. (MamaYe Ghana)
Tracking government commitments can increase accountability • In Nigeria the group Accountability for Maternal and Newborn Health has been established to track progress, facilitate transparency in SRMNH issues, and stimulate action on priorities and commitments. In a pioneering move for African countries, a new National Independent Accountability Mechanism has been set up to track progress on implementing the recommendations of the Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health and the national roadmap. Stakeholders in Tanzania have established a Countdown Country Case Study (Countdown to 2015 group) with in-country activities which are providing evidence on the progress (and lack thereof) in SRMNH care that will be fed directly into the mid-term review of the national policies for achieving MDGs 4 and 5, as well as the One Plan and the Health Sector Strategic Plan III. •
Supportive governance and an enabling financial environment are essential for accountability • Tracking domestic resources dedicated to SRMNH services is often difficult:
•
reports can be difficult to obtain and flows of SRMNH financing may not be disaggregated. Countries of the African Union pledged, through the 2001 Abuja Declaration, to allocate 15% of their overall national budget to the health sector, but only a few countries have fulfilled this pledge. Advocacy campaigns and community action groups are now working to keep SRMNHrelated commitments in the public eye, in order to bring decision-makers and those in power to account. Civil society can call for social accountability Five African countries have launched and developed an SRMNH campaign called MamaYe, which aims to bring together all actors working in SRMNH, from local to national level, to increase and sustain the visibility of SRMNH issues. Advocacy campaigns and national websites are platforms from which evidence, advocacy and accountability initiatives can be linked together and shared widely with a multitude of stakeholders in each country. They allow greater publicity and dialogue in both formal and informal settings, in order to focus attention and promote action on SRMNH.
Source: Adriane Martin-Hilber and Louise Hulton, Evidence for Action.
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
25
considering quality of care, particularly education, competencies, skill-mix and collaborative practice.
Midwifery education: still neglected SoWMy data provide strong evidence of pervasive gaps in the infrastructure, resources and systems that affect midwifery education. The SoWMY survey collected a fair proportion of the information used by the forthcoming Rapid Midwifery Assessment Tool* to evaluate the quality of midwifery education. The tool has six sections: infrastructure; teachers, tutors and preceptors; students (discussed in the Availability section above); clinical education; curriculum; and influencing factors (discussed in the Regulation and Policy sections below). Inadequate infrastructure is a key problem for midwifery education. Insufficient or poor-quality equipment at teaching institutions is a problem for 80% of midwife cadres, 69% of nurse-midwife cadres and 44% of nurse cadres. Lack of classroom space is perceived as a challenge to the education of 53% of midwife cadres, 43% of nurse-midwife cadres and 17% of nurse cadres.
FIGURE 11 45
Midwives
Percentage of each cadre type
40
wives
se-midwives 26
ses
Minimum number of births to be conducted under clinical supervision
Nurse-midwives
35
Nurses
30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Fewer than 10
10–19
20–29
30–39
40–49
50 or more
Minimum number of supervised births each student must complete before graduation
* This tool is being developed by ICM and Jhpiego for particular use in low- and middle-income countries.
45 40
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014 35
Concerns relating to teaching staff were also common. Difficulties in recruiting sufficient teaching staff were reported in relation to 82% of midwife cadres, 62% of nurse-midwife cadres and 39% of nurse cadres. Similarly, difficulty in recruiting appropriately qualified teaching staff was reported in relation to 77% of midwife cadres, 62% of nursemidwife cadres and 39% of nurse cadres. Teacher retention is also problematic. In many countries there is inadequate investment in the education of faculty and teachers are unable to update their theoretical knowledge and/or clinical practice skills. This limits the quality of education provided, and learning is often lecture-based. This has profound implications for the ability to educate and train midwives competent to provide the full range of services needed. The greater challenges with recruiting teachers and maintaining competency in direct-entry education programmes may be due to the fact that in some countries direct-entry education for a midwife is only recently established and they are struggling to recruit from a smaller pool of qualified teachers with pedagogic skills and specialized knowledge of midwifery. In terms of the clinical practice requirement in education programmes, the number of births a midwife must conduct under supervision prior to graduation varies across countries (see Figure 11). The median reported number of supervised births required for midwives is 34, for nursemidwives 30, and for nurses 20. Each of these medians is less than the indicative number discussed in ICM’s education standards companion guidelines [16], which encourages forward planning to ensure that sufficient midwifery practical experience be factored into education pathways and suggests a median of 50 supervised births (though some students will require more for competency demonstration and others less). Difficulties in providing students with sufficient clinical experience were reported in relation to 80% of midwife cadres, 62% of nurse-midwife cadres and 61% of nurse cadres. In many settings, therefore, midwives and other professionals may graduate from their education programmes without enough practical experience of childbirth.
Most midwifery and nursing cadres have a national curriculum that is followed by all schools (85% of midwife cadres, 64% of nursemidwife cadres and 78% of nurse cadres). The ICM recommends that curricula be reviewed every five years [16] and this has happened for 78% of midwife cadres, 48% of nurse-midwife cadres and 28% of nurse cadres. This may reflect the increasing number of direct-entry midwifery programmes established in recent years. The content of these curricula is not generally perceived to be a challenge to the provision of quality midwifery education, but this is an issue for a significant minority of cadres. Among countries where there is no standard curriculum, there are national standards for assessing education quality for only 33% of midwife cadres and 38% of nurse-midwife cadres. Potential ways to improve the quality of midwifery education suggested by SoWMy workshop participants include the implementation and regular review of minimum standards for curricula (aligned with ICM global standards), and the introduction of faculty development plans, including regular refresher training and formal qualifications for teachers/tutors/supervisors. Other suggestions included: improved access to simulation training and equipment; regulation/accreditation of private midwifery schools (although far from all public schools are regulated or accredited either); more â&#x20AC;&#x153;hands-onâ&#x20AC;? training in health facilities; and improvements in monitoring and evaluating education and training institutions. More in-service training and continuing professional development are seen as good means of improving quality, and this included supportive supervision of teachers/tutors. Such investments would enable improvements on a range of issues, including: productivity, competency and quality of care; accountability of service providers to service users; workforce morale; continuous professional development; effective regulation; and collaboration between different professional associations. The involvement of midwifery staff in maternal and perinatal death
reviews helps to identify areas for improvement and to overcome systemic problems.
Improving legislation, regulation and licensing mechanisms Supporting and protecting midwives by law (providing a legal right to practise) is an important acknowledgement of their worth. Only 35 out of the 73 responding countries (48%) have legislation recognizing midwifery as a regulated profession, and in five of these countries the legislation is not applied. Among the 54 countries who took part in both SoWMy 2011 and SoWMy 2014, the proportion of countries with such legislation has increased only slightly (from 35% to 37%). Yet progress is being made: 12 countries reported that legislation is being created. This does, however, leave 26 countries with no such legislation and none being created.
Midwives, when educated and regulated to international standards, are able to provide quality care and have a positive impact on sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health outcomes. (Jhpiego/Ali Khurshid)
In nearly all responding countries there is at least one organization with responsibility for the regulation of midwifery practice (see Figure 12). Half (51%) said that midwifery is regulated by the Ministry of Health or other government department, and a similar proportion (47%) mentioned a government-approved regulatory
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
27
FIGURE 12
due to political instability or insufficient resources. Adequately resourced regulatory systems are a key priority for quality improvement. The workshop participants considered ways to tackle these issues, and suggestions included ensuring that regulation of midwifery is separate from regulation of other health professions, but with appropriate coordination.
Regulation and licensing of midwives
Government department or government approved regulatory body regulates midwifery practice
88
Officially recognized definition of professional midwife
77
60
System of licensing
Midwife is a recognized and regulated profession
53
Electronic register for licensing
48 0
20
40
60
80
100
Percentage of 73 responding countries Yes
Yes, but with conditions
No, but it is being created
No
organization such as a Board or Council. A few countries have more than one regulatory body. Just 6 of the 73 countries report having no regulatory body whatsoever, of which 3 (Democratic Republic of Congo, Guatemala and South Sudan) said that one is being set up. The existence of a regulatory body is necessary, but not sufficient, to ensure effective regulation. Survey respondents were asked to state the responsibilities of their regulatory organization(s) (facilitating a comparison with ICM’s global standards [18]). Figure 13 shows that the main responsibilities currently held by regulatory organizations are: setting standards for midwifery practice; registration; applying sanctions in misconduct cases; and setting ethical standards. Relatively few countries mentioned accreditation of education providers or protection of the professional title of “midwife”. Although most countries report that a regulatory organization is responsible for the functions listed in Figure 13, information from the 37 country workshops indicates that in some countries regulatory organizations do not fulfil these functions effectively, due to issues such as: lack of clear description of midwifery competencies; lack of nationally agreed standards for midwifery education (especially in the private sector); and lack of effective regulatory processes, e.g.
28
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
The scope of practice for different cadres in the midwifery workforce should be laid down by regulatory mechanisms, but these are often ineffective. For instance, there are countries in which midwives perform some or all of the seven basic signal functions without being authorized to do so, often because they are the only health-care provider present when the need arises. The SoWMy data allow a comparison of the authorized and actual activities of midwives in relation to the seven B-EmONC signal functions as shown in Figure 14. Assisted vaginal delivery stands out as the function with the most significant disparity between authorization and provision, with 19 countries stating that midwives perform this even though they are not authorized to do so. Midwives are also authorized to provide at least one type of family planning product in 71 out of the 73 countries, the two exceptions being China and Iraq. In 57 countries midwives are authorized to provide all four types listed in the questionnaire: contraceptive injection, contraceptive pill, intra-uterine device and emergency contraception (EC), commonly referred to as the “morning-after pill”. Authorization does not, of course, guarantee availability or quality; at country level there is very little correlation between unmet need for contraception and the number of family planning products that midwives are authorized to provide. Out of the four types of contraception listed in the questionnaire, EC is the least likely to be provided by midwives, although 61 of the 73 countries reported that it was. Neither women nor midwives are protected or supported without appropriate regulation, registration and licensing. For the latter, licensing systems for
midwives exist in 34 of the 73 countries (47%) and are being created in a further 11 countries (15%). In all but one of the 34 countries with a licensing system, licensing is compulsory before a midwife can practise. Again, a system is a crucial first step, but does not guarantee effective implementation. This is illustrated by the survey, which found that only 26 of the 73 countries have a system of regular re-licensing (typically annually or every five years) and only 17 make continuing professional development a condition of re-licensing. A register of licensed midwives exists in 48 of the responding countries, of which 28 have an electronic register. Among the 54 countries which took part in both SoWMy 2011 and SoWMy 2014 there has been a 40% increase in those with an electronic register. This progress is likely to continue: a further 18 countries reported plans to create a register. Paper-based registers are updated less frequently than electronic ones (10% of countries with a paper-based register and 43% of those with an electronic one say that the register is updated at least once a month).
Functions and responsibilities of regulatory bodies
FIGURE 13
79
Setting standards for midwifery practice
78
Registration of practising midwives Applying sanctions to midwives found to have been guilty of misconduct
74
Setting standards for professional ethics
73
Establishing the scope of midwifery practice
70
Setting standards for education
70
Investigating alleged misconduct or incompetence
70
Ensuring the quality of education
68
Verification of midwives joining the workforce from other countries
68
Continuing professional development
67
Advising government on MNH care policy
67
Assessing competency prior to registration
62
Protection of the professional title ‘midwife’
60
Accreditation of education providers
53
Other
11 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Percentage of 73 responding countries
Improving professional associations All 73 countries except Turkmenistan reported at least one professional association, college or union which is open to midwives, nursemidwives or auxiliary midwives. 51 of the 73 countries are represented within the ICM and 45 in the ICN, providing linkages to the global bodies and the technical support this offers. The 73 countries listed a total of 119 professional associations of which 71 (60%) were created in or after 1990; nearly all are specifically for midwives and/or nurses. In a few countries no midwifery or nursing association was mentioned, but instead information was provided about, for example, an association for obstetricians which midwives and nurse-midwives are entitled to join. Although nearly all countries named associations, only 60 were able to provide data on the number of members of each association. Across
B-EmONC signal functions: midwives’ authorized and actual roles
FIGURE 14
Parenteral administration of antibiotics Administration of oxytocics Administration of anticonvulsants Assisted instrumental delivery by vacuum extractor Manual removal of placenta Manual vacuum aspiration for retained products Newborn resuscitation with mask
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Number of countries Authorised and do
Not authorised but do
Authorised but don’t do
Not authorised and don’t do
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
29
number advise members on quality standards for SRMNH care. Interestingly, 53% report being involved in negotiating work or salary issues with their government, a function that is generally the domain of a trade union.
An effective and clear regulatory environment strengthens the role of midwives and contributes to improving quality of care. (Jhpiego/Kate Holt)
these 60 countries nearly 670,000 members were reported (not all are midwives/nurse-midwives because some associations are also open to other cadres of health professional). Across the 50 countries that provided data on the number of members currently practising, 86% of the total membership is currently practising in-country, which suggests that, in these 50 countries, membership lists are kept reasonably up to date. The â&#x20AC;&#x153;bold stepsâ&#x20AC;? recommended in SoWMy 2011 for professional associations included contributing to the policy arena and advocating for better working conditions. Figure 15 shows that nearly all of the 119 associations play a role in continuing professional development, and a similar
FIGURE 15
Functions of professional associations open to midwives Continuing professional development
92
Advising members on quality standards for MNH care
88
Advising the government on the most recent national MNH or health policy document
77
Advising/representing members accused of misconduct or incompetence
60
Negotiating work or salary issues with the government.
53 48
Other
0
20
40
60
80
100
Percentage of 119 associations performing each function
30
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;S MIDWIF E RY 2014
Participants in the 37 country workshops made several suggestions about how to strengthen professional associations. Associations specifically for midwives were suggested, as well as: encouraging all midwives to join; ensuring professional associations contribute to policy discussions and key decisions affecting SRMNH services at national and regional levels; advocacy to increase the visibility of the profession and advance the rights of the midwifery workforce, e.g. improving staff welfare, security and promotion; improving collaboration and cooperation between all health-care professional associations and other SRMNH stakeholders such as NGOs; and strengthening the administrative and advocacy capacity of professional associations [83].
Policy and planning The alignment and cohesion of policy and planning instruments, along with data for strategic intelligence, are essential to deliver effective coverage of quality midwifery care. Across the 73 countries, respondents listed 276 policies, plans and legislations in place for organizing, delivering and monitoring SRMNH services (almost 4 on average per country) and all countries reported at least one policy/plan/ legislative in force. 68 countries have a national health plan (although not all used this title), 66 have a national SRMNH plan/strategy/roadmap or similar and national HRH plans are in place in 52 countries. Of the 52 countries with a national HRH plan, 39 (75%) said the MNH workforce targets in the plan are based on or linked to SRMNH service coverage targets in the national SRMNH/health plans. 25 of the 73 countries returned policy documents in support of their responses. These documents were catalogued in relation to the 2014 PMNCH/
KEY FINDINGS
WHO Multisectoral Policy Compendium [51], from which it is evident that most of these 25 countries have policy foundations that span the domains of SRMNH and HRH. Of the 47 countries which reported non-professional cadres, 12 submitted policy documents but only 4 submitted policies which specifically mentioned or included community health workers. In this particular sample, HRH policies seem not to include CHWs and their roles within the health system structure. However, some countries have developed or are in the process of developing policies specifically addressing community services and the roles of CHWs and these linkages are encouraged. Countries with national health, SRMNH and/ or HRH plans tended to report that these are recent (72% of the plans were published in or after 2009). Most are still current, covering a period up to or beyond 2014. National SRMNH plans tend to be less recent than national health plans and national HRH plans: 42%, 12% and 19% respectively were published prior to 2009. Costed plans are important in order to prioritize service areas in a country. Out of the 276 policy documents reported, 170 (62%) contain plans that are fully costed. National health plans and national SRMNH plans are the most likely to be fully costed (71% and 70% respectively, compared with 60% of national HRH plans). Out of the 73 responding countries, 54 (74%) said that their existing policy documents specifically address how the country is going to improve all four elements of availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of services. However, it should be noted that the existence of a policy document does not guarantee its effective implementation.
Summary If our goal is to provide universal, effective coverage of midwifery services to all women and newborns, regardless of wealth, place of residence or age, we must jointly address the
Quality
Pervasive gaps in infrastructure, resources and systems adversely affect midwifery education.
Key challenges for quality midwifery education include the inadequacy of secondary education, lack of teaching staff, poor quality equipment, lack of opportunities for practical training and lack of classroom space.
The number of births a midwife conducts under supervision prior to graduation varies across countries, and may be insufficient to meet competency requirements.
Nearly all responding countries have at least one regulatory body, but many lack legislation recognizing midwifery as a regulated profession, clearly described midwifery competencies and education standards, and effective regulatory processes.
Nearly all countries reported having at least one professional association open to midwives, 80% provided data on the numbers of midwives in membership and 75% knew who was currently practising in-country.
Among the 54 countries which took part in both SoWMy 2011 and SoWMy 2014 there has been a 40% increase in those with an electronic register of licensed midwives.
Alignment and cohesion of policy and planning instruments in SRMNH and HRH are essential to deliver effective coverage of midwifery services: 75% of countries said the SRMNH workforce targets in their HRH plans was linked to the national SRMNH or health plan.
Of the 276 policy documents reported, 62% contain plans that are costed, among which the SRMNH plans are more likely to be fully costed than the human resource for health plans.
dimensions of AAAQ, the lack of which holds back countries and excludes parts of their populations. Many countries have moved to make the necessary workforce available, but much needs to be done to meet shortages and/or deficits in the number and composition of the midwifery workforce to ensure progress to universal coverage. The diversity between countries in typologies and composition of health workers contributing to SRMNH services is striking, but using information from the SoWMy survey it is possible to assess the roles, competencies, education and contribution of each and every cadre. As
C H A PTER 2: TH E STATE OF MID WIFERY TOD AY
31
many of these workers do not spend 100% of their time on SRMNH tasks it is important to calculate the full-time equivalent workforce in each country in order to compare availability with need for services. Clearly this information, along with minimum workforce data, is required to provide strategic intelligence informing policy and planning processes. Countries can use this information to actively manage the education of the midwifery workforce, adequately remunerate those employed, and effectively promote a career as a midwife. This will ensure that the future workforce meets the needs of future populations. Countries should also press forward with plans to improve the accessibility, acceptability and quality of care. Accessibility can be addressed
FIGURE 16
Midwifery workforce: from availability to quality 8
Midwives Nurse-midwives
Auxiliaries Associate clinicians Physicians (general) Obstetricians/ gynaecologists
Number of midwifery workers (in millions)
Nurses
7
6
5
90%
4
reduction
3
2
1
0
32
Headcount
Full-time equivalent
Full-time Full-time equivalent, equivalent, all midwifery all midwifery tasks, > than 25 tasks supervised births
T H E S TAT E OF T HE WORL D‘S MIDWIF E RY 2014
by using GIS and appropriate equity-based planning tools, as well as ensuring that their national “minimum guaranteed benefits package” for SRMNH includes all essential interventions. Acceptability should be recognized as an important element of care: steps should be taken to reduce disrespectful care and instead to promote care that is sensitive to social and cultural needs, accompanied by robust research on women’s perceptions of and attitudes towards the midwifery workforce. Finally, maternal and newborn mortality will remain high unless the quality of care is addressed. Countries should improve the quality of midwifery education, regulation and association, and address pervasive gaps in order to move towards effective coverage. Figure 16 shows the gap in effective coverage from the availability and quality dimensions: the availability of all workers who participate in the midwifery workforce of the 73 SoWMy countries, and those who have the dedicated time, authorized roles, practical training and competencies to provide quality care. The constraints to coverage within these two dimensions are substantial (leaving aside the problems of acceptability and accessibility). Reducing this gap requires the collection and better use of data on: what proportion of available midwifery workers are full-time with SRMNH services, how many students are likely to join the workforce in the future, where the health workers are located, how women and their communities feel about the services they experience, and how the HRH plan furthers SRMNH strategies. To achieve this, strong leadership is needed to prioritize midwifery and release resources to support this new approach to workforce and service planning.
STATE OF THE WORLD’S MIDWIFERY COUNTRY SURVEY RESPONDENTS Special thanks go to the heads of UNFPA country offices, and their staff, for facilitating the task of collecting responses to the country survey. All contributions are greatly appreciated. The following list includes the names of the respondents who wished to be acknowledged. We would also like to extend our appreciation to the many other contributors who requested not to be acknowledged by name in the report. All efforts have been made to make this list as extensive as possible. Sincere apologies are extended to any respondents who have been unintentionally omitted. Afghanistan: Shakila Abdaly, Yalda Ahmadi, Masud Arzoiy, Aysha, Pashtoon Azfar, Malin Bogren, Batul Erfani, Sadia Fayiq Ayobi, Sharifullah Haqmal, Mohammad Jebran, Mohammad Massod, Ziba Mazari, Modassar, A. Molakhil, Mursal Musawi, Feroza Mushtari, Nayani, Fahima Nazari, Partamin Partamin, Jawad Patwal, M. Qasim, Rashidi, Monira Rauf, Sediqullah Reshteen, Nahida Shah, Shahir, Shakila, Shams, Amina Sultani, Yalda, Najiba Zafari Angola: Maria José Costa, Hirondina Cucubica, Ana Leitão, Ines Leopoldo Azerbaijan: Farid Babayev Bangladesh: Alamgir Ahmed, Rahima Jamal Akhtar, Jesmin Akter, Halima Akther, Iqbal Anwar, Farida Begum, Shuriya Begum, Taslima Begum, Rehana Begum, Roushon Ara Begum, Ismat Bhuiya, Hafizur Rahman Chowdhury, Ira Dibra, Monica Fong, Dolly Maria Gonsalves, Abdul Halim, Sajedul Hassan, Emdadul Hoque, A.K.M Amir Hossain, Mohammad Iqbal, Ashraful Islam Babul, Syed Abu Jafar Musa, Rezaul Karim, Umme Salma Khanum, Rabeya Khatoon, Michaela Michel-Schuldt, Abdul Hamid Moral, Gaziuddin Mohammad Munir, A.Z. Musa, Ylva Sörman Nath, A.K.M. Mukhlesur Rahman, Feroza Sarker, Latifa Prof. Shamsuddin, Khandaker Sefayet Ullah, Mohammed Sharif, Fahmida Sultana, Saria Tasnim, Youssef Tawfik, Peggy Thorpe, Joanna Tingstrom, Mofiz Ullah, Yukie Yoshimura Benin: Solange Adechokan-Kanmadozo, Latifatou Agbodjelou, Olga Agbohoui Houinato, Fulgencia Ahossi Assogbague, Chantal Akitossi, Arlette Akoueikou, Karamatou Bangbola, Conrad Deguenon, Bernice Deleke Koko Houngbede, Constance Dossou, Anatole Dougbe, Prudencia Gbaguidi, Dina Gbenou, Sikiratou Gouthon Abou, Yasminath Houenou, Benjamin Hounkpatin, Nestor KouKoui, Mohamed Chakirou Latoundji, Marguerite Magnonfinon, Christian Martins, O. Laurence Monteiro, Julienne Odoulami, Philomène Sansuamou, Amélie Sonon, Marcelle Totchenou, Victor Zoclanclounon Bolivia: Lilian Acunha, Gricel Alarcon, Rene Alberto Castro, Alexia Escobar, Nancy Manjon, Willam Michel, Elva Olivera, Haydee Padilla, Bertha Pooley, Jacquelin Reyes, Celia Taborga, Franz Trujillo, Eugenio Renato Yucra Botswana: Galeagelwe Baikepi, Kebabonye Gabaake, Hannah Kau-Kipo, Veronica Leburu, Lucy Sejo Maribe, Khumo Modisaemang, Keitshokile Dintle Mogobe, Ellen Mokalake, Ruth Mokgehi, Irene Motshewa, Galaletsang Mudongo, Opelo Rankopo, Rina Rapula, Workuu Tegene Solomon, Kabo Tautona, Josephine Tlale Brazil: Vera Bonazzi, Elisabete Franco Cruz, Anna Cunha, Maysa Gomes, Cleiton Euzebio, Amanda Fedevjcyk de Vico, Dulce Ferraz, Emanuelle Goes, Rodolfo Gomez, Jeniffer Goncalves, Roselane Gonçalves, Leila Gottems, Valdecyr Herdy Alves, Felipe Krykhtine, Maria Eliane Liegio, Lorenza Longhi, Fernanda Lopes, Elize Massard da Fonseca, Maria Eliane Matao, Rosani Pagani, Daphne Rattner, Euzi Adriana Rodrigues, Camila Schneck, Valda Fatima Silva, Iara Silveira, Kleyde Ventura Souza, Thais Fonseca Veloso de Oliveira, Maria Esther Vilela, Paula Viana, Marli Villela Mamede, Vera Xavier, Nadia Zanon Narchi, Marcele Zveiter Burkina Faso: Laurentine Barry, Alimata Bationo, Aïssètou Belemvire, Seydou Belemvire, Aicha Boly, Kadidiatou Gnangao, K. Carine Gnangao, Rosine Compaore/Konkobo, Zéinab Derme, Damatou Diabri, Parfait Guibleogo, Nadège W. Guiguemde, Honorine Kabre, Pascaline Kiendrebeogo, Laye Kodjo, Sabine Liliou, Augustine Lompo, Aimée Lompo, Isabelle Minoungou, Azara Morbiga, Bibata Nacoulma, Mariam Nanema, Emmanuel Neya, Mariam Nonguierma, Roselyne Oubda, Catherine Quedraogo, Valentine Ouedraogo, Karidia Ouedraogo, Habibou Ouedraogo, Natalie Roos, Wahabou Sanfo, Isabelle Sanon/Bicaba, Djénéba Sanon/Ouedraogo, Salmata Sanou, Béatrice Sawadogo,
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Edmonde P. Sawadogo, Ramatou Sawadogo, Mariam Tiemtore, Souleymane Zan, Aoua Zerbo, Georgette Zerbo, Céline Zoubga, Aligueta Zoure Burundi: Delphine Arakaza, Prosper Bigirimana, François Busogoro, Georges Gahungu, Fabrice Kakunze, Yolande Magonyagi, Jeanne Marie Nahimana, Rose Simonne Ndayiziga, Bernadette Nkanira Cambodia: Sveng Chea Ath Chhay, Rada Ing, Phuong Keat, Sambo Mey, Sano Phal, Sokun Sok, Rathavy Tung Cameroon: Hortense Atchoumi, Nicole Eteki, Serge Eyebe Eyebe, Assumpta Kechia, Samuel Kingue, Emile Mboudou, Françoise Nissack Central African Republic: Honé Sehuetio Aminata, Yolande Guendoko, Raymond Goula, Suzanne Onambele, Abdoulaye Sepou, Awa Marie Christine Sepou Yanza Chad: Garba Aminatou, Gambaye Christine, Dewala Deborah, Djamon Djakissam, Urbain Djelaou, Mahamat Malloum Fatime, Fatchou Gakaitangou, Dabsou Guidaoussou, Daniel Guira Dangar, Mariam Issaka, Fatchou Marada, Nekingalaou Nadjiri, Rostand Njiki, Adjougoulta Vealeto China: Ning Feng, Ying Liu, Jiong Peng, Chumen Wen Comoros: Hissani Aboubacar, Mahamoud Said Congo: Jeannette Biboussi, Bruno Bilombo, Patrick Bondoumbou, Fabrice Bowamboka, Servais Capo-Chichi, Berthe Dzinga Nguimbi, Anna Fagot, Tanguy Fouemina, Nazaire Roger Issie, Clautaire Itoua, Jean Claude Kala, Philippe Kombo, Jean Blaise Koundika, Marie Fanny Lolo, Jacques Mabiala, Yvette Mavoungou, Michel Mbemba Moutounou, André Mbou, Gaston Mbou Goubili, Jules Cesar Mokoko, Zéphirin Abel Moukolo, Joseph Moutou, Henriette Mpassy Tousseho, Virginie Ndzemba, Jean Pierre Michel Ndzondault, Marcellin Ngambou, Rachel Ngouoni, Adrienne Nguekele, Victorine Nkala, Justin Ongoyohi, Clémence Otilibili Ngoma, Paul Oyere Moke, Fabienne Rimteta, Marie Soulie, Bedi Toyo, Marie Gisele Tsiabola, Yolande Voumbo Congo, Democratic Republic of the: Esperance Ababa, Désiré Bapitani, Marcel Baroani, Jean Baptiste Baruani, Blaise Belesi, Marie Rose Bodisa, Jean Jacques Bosali, Frederick Djunga Pame, Henriette Eke Mbula, Grégoire Hiombo, Ambrockha Kabeya, Céline Kanionga, Rachel Kaswera, Augustin Kiyoyo Belo, Jean-Pierre Lokonga, Louis Lubieno, Raymond Lufwa, Scolastique Mahindo, Nicasie Matoko, Victorine Mbadu, Rose Menga, Jean Pierre Moucka, Epiphanie Ngumbu, Pierre Ntumba, Guy Rammazani, Maurice Tingu Yaba, Beatrice Tshiala, Yvette Tshund'olela, Wivine Yenga Côte d'Ivoire: Eliane Abhé Gnangoran, Laetitia Achi, Evelyne Akaffou, Boa Akandan Edith, Virginie Akunin, Danho Simplice Anongba, Djénéba Boro, Camara D, Anongba Danho Simplice, Abhe Gnangoran Eliane, Adou Hervé, Dibo Amany Essam, Antoinette Kansah, Victor Kassi, Isabelle Akoua Koffi, Seidou Koné, Privat Kouakou, Christine Kouakou, Alphone Kouakou Kouamé, Hortance Kouamé, Arthur Kouamé, Kouakou Raymond Kouamé, Amadou Ouattara Liagui, Dia Loukou, Koné Mamadou, Messo Ménin, Boston Mian, Affoué N'Guessan, Antoinette N’Guessan née Ouattara Tiékhou, Hortense N’Guessan née Ouattara, Benjamin Nambala, Rosalie N’Zi, Philomène Oulai-Bamba, Soumahoro Oulai, Geneviève Saki-Nekouressi, Essiagne Daniel Sess, Kadidia Sow, Degny Togbé Ida Anon née, Kadidia Touré-Coulibaly, Anna Touré-Ecra, Christiane Welfens-Ekra, Ignace Yao, Bi Zehoua Yougoné Djibouti: Assia Mola Ali, Kaltoum Houmed Asso, Rayana Bou Haka, Aicha Djama, Oubah Hassan Farah, Mariam Mohamed Kamil, Fato Mohamed Kassim
STATE OF THE WORLD’S MIDWIFERY COUNTRY SURVEY RESPONDENTS (continued) Egypt: Amal Abd El Hay, Ehab El Beltagi, Hala El Hennawy, Samia Fargaly, Magdy Khaled, Kawthar Mahmoud, Mohga Metwally, Mohamed Nour El Din, Sherin Saad, Kaima Said, Yasser Salah, Adel Shakshak, Alaa Sultan
Lao People’s Democratic Republic: Anna af Ugglas, Kaisone Chounlamany, Sengmany Khambounheuang, Eunyoung Ko, Alongkone Phengsavanh, Bounnack Saysanasongkham, Kopkeo Souphanthong, Somchanh Xaysida
Eritrea: Yordanos Mehari, Assefash Zehaie
Lesotho: Masechaba Moru, Thabelo Ramatlapeng
Ethiopia: Ruman Abdurashid, Samuel Aberham, Azeb Admassu, Feven Alazar, Assamenew Assefa, Miftah Awei, Aster Berhe, Asmare Demilew, Mintwab Gelagay, Gebreamlak Gidey, Yezabinesh Kibe, Dorothy Lazaro, Tesfaye Negewo, Alemnesh Tekleberhan, Luwam Teshome, Aster Teshome, Elizabeth Wildeys, Zalalem Woubshet, Hiwot Wubshet
Liberia: Emilia Ayenaniz, Lucy Barh, Harriett Dolo, Musu Duworko, Musu Duworko, Comfort J. Gebeh, Cuallau Jabbeh-Howe, Yanquah Kargbo, Douboi G. Korkoyeh, Vachel Lake, Esther K. Lincoln, Maybe Garmai Livingstone, Nancy E. R. Masaline, Snoyonoh Miller, Cecelia Morris, Nancy T. Moses, Rex Moses, John Mulbah, Veronica Neblett Siafa, Salat A. Norris, Helena L. Nuahn, Linda Q. Nyansaiye, Tolbert Nyenswah, Philderald Pratt, Angela J. Sawyer, Marion Subah, Bentoe Zoogley Tehoungue, Mary W. Tiah, Anita S. Varney, Dina Wah Kapel, Shelly A. Wright, Anna K. Yse, Aliesa A. Zezay
Gabon: Noelle Avomo, Aboubacar Inoua, Stoelle Patricia Keba, Olga Mavoungou, Chantal Mbodi, Justine Mekui Ella, Jean François Meye, Mireille Nkoa, Kévine Leila Nzinga, Serge Yaya Gambia: Alieu Jammeh, Bakary Jargo, Alhagie Kolley Ghana: Mary Nana Ama Brantuo, Gladys Brew, Evans Danso, Fredrica Hanson, Joyce Jetuah, George Kumi Kyeremeh, Philomina Wooley Guatemala: Daniel Frade, Alejandro Silva Guinea: Binta Bah, Halimatou Bah, Jean-René Camara, Moussa Kantara Camara, Marie Conde, Adama Manyan Condé, Aissatou Condé, Apolinaire Delamou, Saliou Dian Diallo, Mohamed Faza Diallo, Houleymatou Diallo, Malal Diallo, Aboubacar Kaba, Toumany Keita, Enego Koivogui, Mamady Kourouma, Richard Kpamy, Sory Bantou Oulare, Fatoumata Gnélé Sow, Kadiatou Sy, Mbemba Traoré, Mohamed Lamine Yansané Guinea-Bissau: Fernanda Alves, Alfredo Claudino Alves, Beti C., Luis Camala, Olga Campos, Silvio Coelho Caetano, Alfredo da Costa, Euclides dos Santos, Maria Aramatulai Injai, Agostinho Mbarco Ndumba, Augusto Viegas, Hamilton Viera Ferreira Haiti: Ramiz Alakbarov, Amaida Augustin, Lourdes Belotte, Jean-Claude Cadet, Gilles Champetier de Ribbes, Marie Lucie Chaudry, Kettely Chevalier, Gislhaine D’Alexis, Nadege Daudier Denis, Evelyne Degraff, Ralph Dougé, Jacques Dulaurier, Florence Duperval Guillaume, Luterse Dupont, Marie Sheyla Durandisse, Jean Fanelise, Reynold Grand-Pierre, Jules Grand-Pierre, Maguie Philistin Guerrier, Joseph Herold, Patrice Honoré, Lucito Joanis, Erica Laforest, Claire Nicole Lebrun, Fritz Louis Andre Michel, Paul Madianite, André Megie, Mona Metellus, Gadener Michaud, Stéphane Michel, Fritz Moise, Rose Myrtha Evenou, Ginette Rivière, Jean-Louis Robert, Ifrene Rodeny, Marie Josée Salomon, Edvard Tassy, Youseline Telemaque, Yves Thermidor, Mireille Tribier, Jean-Baptiste Vardine, Ernst Viel, Valerio Vital-Herne, Henri-Claude Voltaire India: Rashmi Asif, Ashok Agarwal, Dinesh Agarwal, Malalay Ahmadzai, Mohammad Ahsan, Rajni Bagga, Arun Bala, Himanshu Bhushan, Manju Chhugani, Dipa Nag Chowdhary, Bandana Das, P. Princy Fernando, Paul Francis, Medha Gandhi, Sandhya Ghai, Sunanda Gupta, Sukhwinder Kaur, Utplakshi Kaushik, Fareha Khan, Aparna Kundu, Josephine Littleflower, Frederika Meijer, Merlin, Madhuri Narayanan, Navita, Anchita Patil, Avinash K. Rana, Surekha Sama, Sheila Seda, Manju Shukla, Leila Caleb Varkey Indonesia: Ms Deri, Rustini Floranita, Ms Hani, Ms Hayati, Elvira Liyanto, Trini Nurwati, Emi Taufik Iraq: Wafa Abbas, Radouane Belouali Kenya: Batula Abdi, Annie Gituto, Margaret Kinyanzwii, Shiphrah Kuria, Joyce Lavussa, Louisa Muteti, Tabitha Mwangi, Agnes Nakato, Dan Okoro, Geoffrey Okumu, Zahida Qureshi Korea, Democratic People’s Republic of: Nazira Artykova, Fatima Gohar, Sathyanarayana Kundur Kyrgyzstan: Aigul Boobekova, Elnura Boronbaeva, Kuban Monolbaev, Asel Orozalieva, Tatiana Popovitskaya, Nurgul Smankulova, Nurida Umetalieva, Bermet Usupov
Madagascar: Nivo Andriamampianina, Edith Boni Ouattara, Ginette Josia Rabefitia, Claire Raharinoro, Evelyne Raherivololona, Heritiana Rakotoson, Haingo Ramananjanahary, Mamihanitra Ramangakoto, Vallyne Rambeloson, Claudine Lala Ramiandrazafy, Herlyne Ramihantaniarivo, Masy Harisoa Ramilirijaona, Alain Gervais Ramorasata, Albert Randriamiaramanana, Oméga Ranorolala, Haingolalao Rapatsalahy, Tatavy Amélie Rasoaniaretana, Dolorès Rasolompiakarana, Edwige Ravaomanana, Stella Ravelonarivo, Marie Georgette Ravoniarisoa, David Rosivel Ravoniarison Malawi: Sheilla Bandazi, Harriet Chanza, Lilian Chimkono, Mable Chinkhata, Grace Hiwa, Felistas Kanthiti, Harriet Kapyepye, F. Kathiti, Hlalapi Kunkeyani, Linily Linyenga, Address Malata, Robert Mangwiro, Griffin Matemba, Rose Mazengera, Pilirani Msambati, Jasintha Mtengezo, Bettie Namale, John Nepiyala, Dorothy Ngoma, Gelian Nkhalamba, Flemmings Nkhandwe, Ann Phoya, Rose Wasili Mali: Diouma Camara, Magassi Coulibaly, Sadio Diarra, Bocar Almodjine Djiteye, Benoît Karambiri, Fatoumata S. Maiga, Diahara Maïga Mauritania: Ould Mohamed Ahmedou, Thierno Ousmane Coulibaly, Mint Moulaye Fatimetou, Bellahi Marieme, Diagne Marième, Ould Eleyatt Mohamed, Ould Ahmedou Mohamed Lemine, Mohamed Boubacar Ould Abdel Aziz Mexico: Amalia Ayala, Laura Cao, Javier Domínguez, Ricardo García, Araceli Gil, Guadalupe Hernández, Juana Jiménez, Guadalupe Landereche, Hilda Reyes, Maricruz Romero, Matthias Sachse, María Eugenia Torres, Miriam Veras Morocco: Wafae Abddain, Laila Acharai, Lakhdar Amina, Drissia Anbouri, Bouchra Asarag, Alaoui Asmae, Aicha Ben Baha, Najat Baloui, Ouafae Belayachi, Moumena Benamar, Menana Boukalouche, Nisrine Bourfoune, Mouna Boussefiane, Lantry Chafika, Ahmed Chahir, Nisrine El Mabrouk, Jamila El Mendili, Sanae El Omrani, Sabah El Ouazzani, Rachida Fadil, Khadija Habibi, Touria Harizi, Souad Khachani, Malika Khayri, Aniss Lakhal, Bouchra Lambarek, Mohammed Lardi, Lhou Lioussfi, Hanane Masbah, Jabal Samira, Arhmad Soukayna, Mohammed Okhouya, Chaimae Rhiat, Khadija Sabbane, Malika Tibhiri, Cherifa Yahmi Mozambique: Munira Abda, Gizela Azambuja, Cidália Baloi, Ana Lurdes Cala, Alicia Carbonell, Paulino Cassoceira, Marcelle Diane Claquin, Ana Maria Dai, Pilar de la Corte Molina, Aicha Issufo, Manuel Macebe, Maria Olga Matavel, Moisés Mazivila, Adelaide Mbebe, Luisa Panguene, Norton Pinto, Deolinda Sarmento, Mohin Sidat, Daniel Simone, Otília Tualufo Myanmar: Than Aye, Hla Hla Aye, Tin Maung Chit, Charlotte Sigurdson Chveistiansen, Nyunt Nyunt Han, Nang Khin Hla, Htay Htay Hlaing, San San Hlaing, Thinn Thinn Hmway, Hlaing Hlaing Htay, Kyu Kyu Khin, Nwe Nwe Khin, Khin Mar Kyi, Ohnmar Kyi, Su Su Lin, Hnin Hnin Lwin, Molly, Hsu Mon Aung, Ohn Ohn Mya, Yin Mya, Khin Aye Myint, Theingyi Myint, Phone Myint, Moe New, Pale Ou, Sanda, Myint Myint Than, Mya Thida, Khin Thida, Sarabibi Thuzarwin, Hla Mya Thway Einda, Khaing New Tin, Khin Myo Win, New Ni Win, Aye Su Su Win, Myo Yarzar Nepal: Kiran Bajracharya, Ischworid Devi Shrestha, Kerstin Erlandsson, Neera Thakur, Meera Thapa Upadhyay
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STATE OF THE WORLD’S MIDWIFERY COUNTRY SURVEY RESPONDENTS (continued) Niger: Tchima Aboubakar, Yacouba Ali, Laouali Ali, Chaïbou Aminatou, Yaroh Asma Gali, Adamou Balkissa, Adambé Bintou, Boubacar Bobaoua, Altiné Bouli, Abdourahamane Brah, Siddo Moumouni Daouda, Amoul Kinni Ghaïchatou, Amadou Halimatou, Adamou Haoua, Maman Sani Hassane, Moussa Hassane, Chaïbou Ibrah, Adamou Kadi, Sadou Karidio, Abdoulwahab Karimatou, Yayé Katanga, Ibroh Kouboura Abba Moussa, Amadou Mariama, Mariama Pascal, Abdoul Rachid Fatima, Awal Ramatou, Ibrahim Ramatou, Alhassane Safia, Maïmouna Saïdou, Guédé Salamatou, Zeinabou Saley, Ibrahima Souley, Mariko Souleymane, Gaoh Zaharatou, Oumarou Zaratou, Lancina Zeinabou
South Africa: Elgonda Bekker, Dapney N. Chonco, A. Green, Thembeka Gwagwa, Holele, Leonard Kamugisha, Hester Klopper, Busisiwe Kunene, T. Mabudi, Sisan Majeke, Liesbeth Mangathe, N. Mbombo, Ms N. Mphandana, Nokuzola Mzolo, Ms Naicker, Neloius, Deliwe Nyathikazi, Precious Robinson, Gugu Xaba
Nigeria: Aishatu Abubakar, Fred Achem, Gbenga Adelakin, Bose Adeniran, Olusegun Adeoye, Rose Samuel Agbi, Chris Agbogoroma, Uduak Akpan, Enema Job Amodu, Emilene Anakhuekha, Ronke Atamewalen, E. C. Azuike, Remi Bajomo, S.A. Bennibor, Ruth Bosede Daniel, Jean Damascene Butera, Dashe Dasogot, Oluloyo Ebenezer, Margaret Edison, E.A. Emedo, Omoru A. Eseagwu, Flora Etim, Tolu Fakeye, Tokumbo Farayi, Ayikobi Fatimah, Fagbamigbe O. Johnson, Shakuri Kadiri, Lanem Law Kuma, Fasehun Luther-King, Zainab T. Mahood, Fatima Farra Mairami, Philip Momah, Larry Obi Nwaka, Esther Obinya, Ansa Ogu, Bridget Okeke, V.O. Okinrolabu, Moji Okodugha, Bolaji Oladejo, Oluwadamilola Olaogun, Seyi Olujimi, A. O. Osuntogun, Taiwo Oyelade, Olusegun Oyeniyi, Rabiatu Sageer, Tunde Segun, Garba Sufianu, Joy Ufere, Jonathan Unutaro, Alheri Yusuf, Deborah Yusuf
Sudan: Sawsan Eltahir, Nada Gaafar, Nada Hamza, Insaf Hussein, Osama Ismail, Juliana Lunguzi, Mohammed Sidahmed
Pakistan: Jamil Ahmed, Nabeel Akhter, Nighat Durrani, Samia Hashim, Syed Yasir Hussain, Zafar Ikram, Humaira Irshad, Rafat Jan, Zareef Khanza, Fehmida Kousar, Arusa Lakhani, Najma Lalji, Mushtaq Memon, Clara Pasha, Najeeb Rehman, Hidayat Ullah, Wasim, Farzana Zulfiqar Papua New Guinea: Thelma Ali, Julie Dopsie, Gilbert Hiawalyer, Mary Kililo, Ornella Lincetto, Nina Pangiau, Jessica Yaipupu, Carmen Yakopa Peru: Gracia Subiria Rwanda: Gloriose Abayisenga, Ferdinand Bikorimana, Pandora Hardtman, Marie Lyesse Iribagiza, Marie Claire Iryanyawera, Jean Marie Mbonyintwali, Maria Mugabo, Juliet Mukankusi, Josephine Murekezi, Daphrose Nyirasafali, Marie Chantal Umulisa, Jovia Umuriza, Agnes Uwayezu, Marie Chantal Uwimana Sao Tome and Principe: Sonia Afonso, Jose Manuel Carvalho, Maria Elizabeth Carvalho, Pascoal D'Apresentaçao, Yonelma Daio, Maria Quaresma Dos Anjos, Natercia Fernandes, Guldier Afonso Malicia Senegal: Ndeye Amy Ndiaye Bathily, Binta Demba Sarr Athie, Arame Ndiaye Camara, Marie Francaoise Carvalho, Bocar Mamadou Daff, Boureima Diadie, El Hadji Diagne, Ndeye Fatou Ndiaye Diaw, Mariama Dieng, Seyni Konte Diop, Amassaid Diop, Cheikh Bamba Diop, Virginie Diouf, Ibrahima Soukendela Diuof, Codou Fall, Marieme Fall, Sophie Diop Fall, Elhadj Ousseynou Faye, Marieme Ba Gueye, Maimouna Seck Haidara, Heenghee, Selly Kane Wane, Christine Klauth, Mamadou Selly Ly, Maguette Mbaye, Goto Mino, Aissatou Gueye Ndecki, Nogoye Thiam Ndiaye, Madeleine Ndiaye Bocandé, Symphorien Ndione, Laty Gueye Ndoye, Doudou Sene, Fatim Tall, Fatou Toure Sierra Leone: Zainab Blell, Frances Fornah, Hossinatu Mary kanu, Pity Florence Kanu, Elizabeth Lemor, Margaret Mannah-Macarthy, Haja Fatmata Mansaray, Joan H. Shepherd Solomon Islands: Wame Baravilala, Kathy Gapirongo, Jessie Larui, Pauline McNeil Somalia: Saleh Abdale Omar, Mohamed Abdi Farah, Osman Abdi Omar, Halima Abdi Sheikh, Mohamed Abdirahman Ibrahim, Naima Abdukadir Mohamed, Hawa Abdullahi Elmi, Suleyman Abdullahi Mohamed, Lordfred Achu, Mohamed Ahmed Muhamed, Abdikani Ali Ahmed, AbdiKarim Asseir Ali, Moxamed Axmed Jimale, Phocas Biraboneye, Marian Hassan Mohamud, Ahmed Moallim Mohamed, Fatuma Mohamed, Halima Mohamed Ali, Hassan Mohamoud Abdule, Omar Mohamud Ibrahim, Lul Mohamud Mohamed, Rukia Mustaf Haji, Abdullahi Nor Mohamud, Juliana Nzau, Mariam Omar Salad, Elfeky Samar, Abdulkadir Wehliye Afrah
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South Sudan: Victoria Abua, Patrick Achiga, Tereza Achuei, Jemelia Sake Beda, Gillian Butts-Garnett, Lucia Buyanza, Joice Chrisp, Suzie Francis, Mary Rose Juwa, Jacqueline Kaku, Jane Kamau, Jennifer Kibicho, Siama Ladu, Janet Michael, Naseer Nizamani, Elizabeth Odinga, Antonina Oedena, Polly Grace Osua, Taban Patrick, Susan Poni, Grace Temah, Petronella Wawa
Swaziland: Dudu Dlamini, Nomathemba Ginindza, Bakhombisile Gumedze, Thembisile Khumalo, Sibusiso Lushaba, Phumzile Mabuza, Winnie Magagula, Zandile Masangane, Happiness Mkhatshwa, Ruth Mkhonta, Glory Msibi, Isabella Ziyane Tajikistan: Zuhro Abdurakhmanova, Gulbahor Ashurova, Salomudin Isupov, Bunafsha Jonova, Niolbe Khasanova, Said Kurbanov, Saidsho Nosirov, Zulfiya Pirova, Nargis Rakhimova Tanzania, United Republic of: Felister Bwana, Asia Hussein, Theopista John Kabuteni, Frank Komba, Rose Laisser, Sebalda Leshabari, Chiku Lweno, Lucy Mabada, Ahmed Makuwani, Godson Maro, Lena Mfalila, Rose Mlay, Donan Mmbando, Stella Mpanda, Claverly Mpandana, Feddy Mwanga, Martha Rimoy, Gaudiosa Tibaijuka, Ndemetria Vermand Togo: Adjowa Héloïse Adandogou, Kodjovi Edotsè Adjeoda, Guy C. Ahialegbedzi, Nadou Akouete, Ahlonkomba Aithnard, Adjoua D'almeida, Adjikè Assouma, Dankom Bakusa, Manzana Esso Bouloufei, Napo Dare, Kossi Deti, Piyalo Djafalo, Rodrigue Djitrinou, Lonlonko Ayaovi Gbadegbegnon, Tchaa Kadjanta, Binto Kassime, Kodjo Kissi, Estelle Kondi, Clarisse Koudadze, Ablavi Koulete, Kokou Kpeglo, Dzodzo Eli Kpelly, Nadou Lawson, Koffi Egnovor Logan, Bingo Kignomon M'Bortche, T. Kassouta N'Tapi, Adzoa Akpedze Nomenyo, Poovi Nouwodjro, Eralakaza Ouro Bitasse, Essokazim Pekemsi, Afiavi Sallah, Koffi Tekou, Marguerite Vovor Turkmenistan: Kemal Goshliyev, Bahtygul Karryeva Uganda: Cecile Compaore, Esperance Fundira, Jeremiah Lwanga, Primo Madra, Joash Magambo, Zakayo Masereka Black, Disan Mugumya, Mary Gorret Musoke, Mercy Mwanje, Enid Mwebaza, Maria Najjemba, Sarah Namyalo, Ismail Ndifuna, Janet Obuni, Martin Opolot, Olive Sentumbwe, Collins Tusingwire, John Wakida, Sarah Wamala Uzbekistan: Zulfiya Atadjanova, Feruza Fazilova, Nodira Islamova Viet Nam: Erken Arthur, Dat Van Duong, Bang Thi Hoang, Huyen Thi Thanh Le, Hong Thi Luu, Hanh Thi Xuan Nghiem, Khan Cong Nguyen, Takeshi Takai Yemen: Nasser Al-Akhram, Nagiba Al-Shawafi, Nageeb Alhomikany, Taha Almahbashi, Fatoom Nooraldeen, Souad Saleh, Areej Taher, Afrah Thabet, Areej Thaher Zambia: Collins Chansa, Media N. Chikwanda, Emily Chipaya, Elizabeth Kalunga, Brivine kalunga, Sarai Bvulani Malumo, Ndubu Milapo, Universe Mulenga, Genevieve Musokwa, Sarah Shankwaya, Bellington Vwaalika Zanzibar: Ruzuna Abdulrahim, Ali, Ali Kassim Amour, Ramadhan Chande, Mvita H. Haji, Ramadhan Hamza, Valeria Haroub, Ghanima Juma, Juma Rajab Juma, Asma Khamis, Khadija Khamis, Salama K. Khamis, Wanu Khamis, Subira Khatib, Kassim Kirobo, Rose Moh'd, Yahya Msellem, Mwatoum Mussa, Azzah Nofly, Julia Ruben, Talaa M. Said, Sharifa Salmin, Ali Suleiman, Abdul-Rahman Taha, Salma Yussuf Zimbabwe: Cynthia Chasokela, Lilian Dodzo, Noriko Kadomoto, Trevor Kanyowa, Agnes Makoni, Rose Mary Marck-Katumba, M.N. Mothobi, Edwin Tobias Mpeta, Jane Mudyara, Margaret Nyandoro, David Okello, Basile Oleko Tambashe
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15. FHI 360. Gender integration framework: How to integrate gender in every aspect of our work. Durham, NC: FHI 360, 2012. 16. WHO. WHO guidelines on preventing early pregnancy and poor reproductive outcomes among adolescents in developing countries. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011. 17. Bollinger R, Chang L, Jafari R, et al. Leveraging information technology to bridge the health workforce gap. Bull World Health Organ 2013; 91(11):890–2. 18. Landry MD, Hastie R, Oñate K, et al. Attractiveness of employment sectors for physical therapists in Ontario, Canada (1999-2007): Implication for the long term care sector. BMC Health Serv Res 2012; 12:133. 19. Buchan J. Reviewing the benefits of health workforce stability. Hum Resour Health 2010; 8(1):29. 20. Greenhill R, Prizzon A. Who foots the bill after 2015? What new trends in development finance mean for the post-MDGs. ODI Working Papers, 360. 2012. Available from: http://www.odi.org.uk/ sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/ publications-opinion-files/7905.pdf (accessed Mar 31, 2014). 21. Horton R, Lo S. Investing in health: Why, what, and three reflections. Lancet 2013; 382:1859–61. 22. UN Secretary-General. Global strategy for women’s and children’s health. New York: United Nations, 2010. 23. United Nations Foundation. About Every Woman, Every Child, 2013. Available from: http://www. everywomaneverychild.org/about (accessed Mar 31, 2014). 24. Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health. Keeping promises, measuring results. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2011. 25. iERG. Every Woman, Every Child: From commitments to action. The first report of the independent Expert Review Group (iERG) on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2012. 26. iERG. Every Woman, Every Child: Strengthening equity and dignity through health. The second report of the independent Expert Review Group (iERG) on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2013. 27. UN Commission on Life Saving Commodities for Women and Children. Commissioners’ Report. New York: United Nations, 2012. 28. World Health Organization and World Meteorological Organization. Atlas of health and climate. Geneva: WHO, 2012.
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42. Stewart M, Candlish R, Henderson J, Brocklehurst P. Review of evidence about clinical, psychosocial and economic outcomes for women with straightforward pregnancies who plan to give birth in a midwife-led birth centre, and outcomes for their babies. Oxford: National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, 2004.
31. Center for Reproductive Rights. CPD and human rights: 20 years of advancing reproductive rights through UN treaty bodies and legal reform. New York: UNFPA, 2013. Available from: http://www.unfpa. org/webdav/site/global/shared/ documents/publications/2013/ icpd_and_human_rights_20_years. pdf (accessed Mar 31, 2014).
43. WHO. World health report 2005. Make every mother and child count. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2005.
32. WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF, AMDD. Monitoring emergency obstetric care: A handbook. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2009.
45. Brodie P. Midwifing the midwives: Addressing the empowerment, safety of, and respect for, the world’s midwives. Midwifery 2013; 29(10):1075–6.
33. Sandall J, Soltani H, Gates S, et al. Midwife-led continuity models versus other models of care for childbearing women. Cochrane database Syst Rev 2013; 8:CD004667. 34. Kruske S, Kildea S, Barclay L. Cultural safety and maternity care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians. Women and Birth 2006; 19(3):73. 35. Sibley LM, Sipe TA, Koblinsky M. Does traditional birth attendant training increase use of antenatal care: A review of the evidence. J Midwifery Women’s Health 2004; 298–305. 36. Homer CSE, Lees T, Stowers P, et al. Traditional birth attendants in Samoa: Integration with the formal health system. Int J Childbirth Educ 2012; 2(1):5–11. 37. Chomat A, Solomons N, Montenegro G, et al. Maternal health and health- seeking behaviors among indigenous Mam mothers from Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. Rev Panam Salud Publica 2014; 35(2):113–20. 38. Barclay L, Aiavao F, Fenwick J, et al. Midwives’ tales: Stories of traditional and professional birthing in Samoa. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2005. 39. Tracy SK, Hartz DL, Tracy MB, et al. Caseload midwifery care for women of all risk compared to standard hospital care: M@NGO, a randomized controlled trial. Lancet 2013; 382(9906):1723–32. 40. ten Hoope-Bender P. Continuity of maternity care for all women. Lancet 2013; 382:1685–7. 41. Devane D, Brennan M, Begley C, et al. Socioeconomic value of the midwife: A systematic review, meta-analyses, meta-synthesis and economic analysis of midwife-led models of care. London: The Royal College of Midwives Trust, 2010.
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46. Sullivan K, Lock L, Homer C. Factors that contribute to midwives staying in midwifery: A study in one area health service in New South Wales, Australia. Midwifery 2011; 27:331–335. 47. Sandall J. Midwives’ burnout and continuity of care. Br J Midwifery 1997; 5(2):106–11. 48. McCarthy CF, Voss J, Salmon ME, et al. Nursing and midwifery regulatory reform in east, central, and southern Africa: A survey of key stakeholders. Hum Resour Health 2013; 11(1):29. 49. Samb B, Celletti F, Holloway J, et al. Rapid expansion of the health workforce in response to the HIV Epidemic. N Engl J Med 2007; 357(24):2510–4. 50. Cadée F, Perdok H, Sam B, et al. “Twin2twin” an innovative method of empowering midwives to strengthen their professional midwifery organisations. Midwifery 2013; 29(10):1145–50. 51. ICM. Twinning as a tool for strengthening midwives associations: Operational manual. The Hague: International Confederation of Midwives; 2014. 52. Kruk ME, Hermosilla S, Larson E, Mbaruku GM. Bypassing primary care clinics for childbirth: A cross-sectional study in the Pwani region, United Republic of Tanzania. Bull World Health Organ 2014; 92:246–53. 53. Campbell J, Dussault G, Buchan J, et al. A universal truth: No health without a workforce. Forum Report, Third Global Forum on Human Resources for Health, Recife, Brazil. Geneva: Global Health Workforce Alliance and World Health Organization, 2013. 54. Conway S, Surka S, Campbell J. A connected health workforce: An innovation brief. Barcelona: ICS Integrare, 2014.
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55. Kohn LT, Corrigan JM, Donaldson MS. To err is human: Building a safer health care system. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2001.
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71. Friedman HS. How much does it cost to educate midwives? 2011. Available from: http://www.unfpa. org/sowmy/resources/docs/background_papers/21_FriedmanH_ EducationCosts.PDF (accessed Mar 31, 2014).
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58. Leap N. Woman-centred or women-centred care: does it matter? Br J Midwifery 2009; 17(1):12–6. 59. WRA. Respectful maternity care charter. Washington DC: White Ribbon Alliance, 2011.
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63. Evans T. Value for money assessment: Community-based midwifery diploma program. Washington DC: The World Bank, 2013. 64. Homer CS, Matha D V, Jordan LG, et al. Community-based continuity of midwifery care versus standard hospital care: A cost analysis. Aust Heal Rev 2001; 24(1):85–93. 65. Alkema L, Kantorova V, Menozzi C, Biddlecom A. National, regional, and global rates and trends in contraceptive prevalence and unmet need for family planning between 1990 and 2015: A systematic and comprehensive analysis. Lancet 2013; 381(9878):1642–52. 66. Family Planning 2020. London Summit on Family Planning, Overview, 2012. Available from: http://www.familyplanning2020. org/images/content/old_site_ files/London-Summit-FamilyPlanningOverview_V1-14June.pdf (accessed Mar 31, 2014). 67. High Level Task Force ICPD. Framework of actions for the follow-up to the programme of action of the International Conference on Population and Development beyond 2014. New York: UNFPA, 2014. 68. WHO. Optimize MNH. WHO recommendations for optimizing health workers roles to improve access to key maternal and newborn health interventions through task shifting. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2012. 69. ICM. Global standards for midwifery education 2010 (amended 2013). The Hague: International Confederation of Midwives, 2013.
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ANNEX 1: GLOSSARY Acceptability (of health services): Dimension of the right to health, which requires that all health facilities, goods and services must be respectful of medical ethics and culturally appropriate, as well as sensitive to gender and life-cycle requirements [1].
of the communities where they work, should be selected by the communities, should be answerable to the communities for their activities, should be supported by the health system but not necessarily a part of its organization, and have shorter training than professional workers [5].
Acceptability (of the health workforce): The characteristics and ability of the workforce to treat everyone with dignity, create trust and enable or promote demand for services [2].
Council, Board, Order or Ordem: A regulatory institution responsible for the registration and licensing of professionals, enabling them to practise, while overseeing their professional conduct and ensuring the ethics of the profession. Usually accredits educational institutions and programmes, sometimes in collaboration with the government or other bodies. It may be government-led, professional-led or mixed. It normally defends patientsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; interests.
Accessibility (of health services): Dimension of the right to health, which requires that health facilities, goods and services are accessible to everyone within the jurisdiction of the State Party. Accessibility has four overlapping dimensions: non-discrimination; physical accessibility; economic accessibility (affordability) and information accessibility [1]. Accessibility (of the health workforce): The equitable access to health workers, including in terms of travel time and transport, opening hours and corresponding workforce attendance, whether the infrastructure is disability-friendly, referral mechanisms and the direct and indirect cost of services, both formal and informal [2]. Accreditation: A process designed to confirm the educational quality of new, developing and established education and training programmes. It is usually carried out by peer/thirdparty review against established standards/outcomes [3]. Association (or College): An organized body of persons engaged in a common professional practice, sharing information, career-advancement objectives, in-service training, advocacy and other activities. It usually defends the interests of the profession and the professionals, but is not a union. Auxiliary midwife: A health worker assisting in the provision of maternal and newborn health care, particularly during childbirth, who possesses some of the competencies in midwifery but is not a fully qualified/licensed midwife. In the latest International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO-08), these are also referred to as midwifery associate professionals [4]. Auxiliary nurse-midwife: A health worker assisting in the provision of maternal and newborn health care, particularly during childbirth but also in the prenatal and post-partum periods, who possesses some of the competencies in midwifery but is not a fully qualified/licensed nurse-midwife. Availability (of health services): Dimension of the right to health that requires functioning public health and healthcare facilities, goods and services, as well as programmes in sufficient quantity [1]. Availability (of the health workforce): The sufficient supply and stock of health workers, with the relevant competencies and skill mix that correspond with the health needs of the population [2]. Community health worker (CHW): According to the WHO definition, community health workers should be members
Efficiency: The capacity to produce the maximum output for a given input [6]. Emergency obstetric and neonatal care facilities, basic (B-EmONC): Peripheral health facilities with maternity and newborn services that have practised in the past three months all seven basic signal functions: parenteral administration of antibiotics, anticonvulsants, oxytocics, manual removal of placenta, manual vacuum aspiration for retained products, assisted instrumental delivery by vacuum extractor, and newborn resuscitation with mask. The functions include stabilization of mothers and newborns with complications before and during transfer to a higher-level hospital [7]. Emergency obstetric and neonatal care facilities, comprehensive (C-EmONC): Health facilities with maternity services that have practised in the past three months all seven B-EmONC signal functions listed above plus two additional signal functions: emergency surgery (caesarean section) and safe blood transfusion (can also include advanced newborn resuscitation) [7]. Equity (in health): The absence of systematic or potentially remediable differences in health status, access to health care and health-enhancing environments, and treatment in one or more aspects of health across populations or population groups defined socially, economically, demographically or geographically within and across countries [6]. Licensing: Generally involves conferring upon an individual a licence to practise their particular health-care profession. Many countries do not distinguish between licensing and registration (see definition below) and both may be partial/ temporary/ conditional in certain circumstances (for instance, newly qualified professionals in some countries) [3]. Millennium Development Goal (MDG): Eight MDGs were adopted by world leaders at the Millennium Summit at the United Nations in 2000, with the global aim of reaching equitable development by 2015. MDG 4 is to reduce the under-5 mortality rate by two thirds of its 1990 value. MDG 5 is to improve maternal health by reducing the maternal mortality ratio by three quarters of its 1990 value by 2015 (Target 5A). The proportion of births attended by skilled health personnel is used as an official indicator of this target. In 2005 the international community added a second
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GLOSSARY (continued) target to MDG 5 (Target 5B): to achieve universal access to reproductive health by 2015. MDG 6 is to combat HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other infectious diseases [8]. Maternal and newborn health (MNH): The health of women during pregnancy, labour, childbirth and the post-partum period, as well as the health and survival of the foetus during labour and the newborn within the first few hours and days, a period during which the newborn is mostly cared for by a professional birth attendant (and in privileged circumstances by a neonatologist). This operational definition differentiates newborn health from neonatal health, which spans the period from birth to the end of the fourth week after birth, and is in accordance with the H4+ (UNAIDS, UN Women, WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF and the World Bank) consensus. Midwife: The report uses the term “midwife” to include those health professionals who are educated to undertake the roles and responsibilities of a midwife regardless of their educational pathway to midwifery, whether directentry or after basic nursing. This definition is aligned with the recommendations and position statements of the International Confederation of Midwives and the International Council of Nurses. ICM defines a midwife as: A person who, having been regularly admitted to a midwifery educational programme, duly recognized in the country in which it is located: has successfully completed the prescribed course of studies in midwifery that is based on the ICM Essential Competencies for Basic Midwifery Practice and the framework of the ICM Global Standards for Midwifery Education; has acquired the requisite qualifications to be registered and/or legally licensed to practise midwifery and use the title “midwife”; and demonstrates competency in the practice of midwifery [9]. Midwifery: Encompasses the health services and health workforce needed to support and care for women and newborns during pre-pregnancy, pregnancy, labour, and the post-partum/postnatal period. It includes: measures aimed at preventing health problems in pregnancy, the detection of abnormal conditions, the procurement of medical assistance when necessary, and the execution of emergency measures in the absence of medical help [10]. Midwifery workforce: The health professionals whose primary function includes health services provided to women during pregnancy, labour and birth, as well as post-partum care for mothers and newborns. The definition includes midwives and others competent in the practice of midwifery, such as nurse-midwives and doctors with relevant competence (and in certain countries, auxiliary nurse midwives). These professionals are also referred to as skilled birth attendants [11]. Midwife-led maternity unit: Birth centres that are staffed and managed by midwives [12]. Minimum guaranteed benefits package: In the context of this report, this refers to a set of health services that a
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government has committed itself to making available to all, free at the point of access. It can also be called an essential health package, which, in a low-income country, consists of a limited list of public health and clinical services which will be provided at primary and/or secondary care level [13]. Nurse-midwife: A person who is legally licensed/registered to practise the full scope of nursing and midwifery in his/her country [14]. Quality (of health services): Dimension of the right to health, which requires that health facilities, goods and services must be scientifically and medically appropriate and of good quality [1]. Quality (of the health workforce): The competencies, skills, knowledge and behaviour of the health worker assessed according to professional norms and as perceived by users [2]. Registration: Generally refers to the process of enrolling with a professional regulatory body following graduation from an accredited programme. Many countries do not distinguish between registration and licensing, but some do and a licence to practise may be issued by a separate authority, particularly in countries where the processes are managed at subnational level. Both licensing and registration may be partial/temporary/conditional under certain circumstances (for instance, newly qualified professionals in some countries) [3]. Regulation: Act of controlling professional practice in accordance with laws, policies and standards, and ethics. It can apply to education, practice, management of the profession, career advancement, etc. Sexual, reproductive, maternal and newborn health (SRMNH): Health services provided in the continuum of care, from information, education and counselling on human sexuality to antenatal, safe delivery and post-natal care, as defined in the ICPD Programme of action, 1994 [15]. Skilled birth attendant: Defined by the WHO as an accredited health professional — such as a midwife, doctor or nurse — who has been educated and trained to proficiency in the skills needed to manage normal (uncomplicated) pregnancies, childbirth and the immediate postnatal period, and in the identification, management and referral of complications in women and newborns [16]. Skills: Abilities learned through training or acquired by experience to perform specific actions or tasks, usually associated with individual tasks or techniques, particularly requiring the use of the hands or body. Union: A form of professional association that can include more than one type of health worker, generally independent of government, whose purpose is to defend the interests of the workers. In some countries the professional association is called a union. Vulnerable: Vulnerable groups, usually women, children and elderly people, are associated with poverty, but vulnerability can also arise when people are isolated, insecure and defenceless in the face of risk, shock or stress [17].
GLOSSARY (continued) REFERENCES 1.
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United Nations Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights. CESCR General Comment No. 14: The right to the highest attainable standard of health (Art. 12). New York: United Nations, 2000. Available from: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/ pdfid/4538838d0.pdf (accessed Mar 31, 2014). Campbell J, Dussault G, Buchan J, et al. A universal truth: No health without a workforce. Forum report, Third Global Forum on Human Resources for Health (Recife, Brazil). Geneva: Global Health Workforce Alliance and World Health Organization, 2013. Mckimm J, Newton PM, Silva A Da, et al. Accreditation of healthcare professional education programs: A review of international trends and current approaches in Pacific Island countries. Sydney: Human Resources for Health Knowledge Hub, University of New South Wales, 2013.
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WHO. Classifying health workers: Mapping occupations to the international standard classification. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011. Available from: http://www.who.int/hrh/statistics/ Health_workers_classification.pdf (accessed Mar 31, 2014). WHO. Strengthening the performance of community health workers in primary health care: A report from a WHO study group. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1989. WHO. Health Systems Strengthening: Glossary. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2012. Available from: http://www.who. int/healthsystems/hss_glossary/ en/index.html (accessed Mar 31, 2014). WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF, AMDD. Monitoring emergency obstetric care: A handbook. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2009.
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ICM. ICM International Definition of the Midwife (Revised June 2011). The Hague: International Confederation of Midwives, 2011.
10. WHO. Midwifery. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2013. Available from: http://www.who.int/ topics/midwifery/en/ (accessed Mar 31, 2014). 11. Pettersson KO, Sherratt D, Moyo N. Midwifery in the Community: Lessons Learned. 1st International Forum on Midwifery in the Community. Hammamet, Tunisia: ICM, UNFPA, WHO, 2006. 12. Walsh D, Devane D. A metasynthesis of midwife-led care. Qual Health Res 2012; 22(7):897â&#x20AC;&#x201C;910.
13. WHO. Essential Health Packages: What are they for? What do they change? WHO Service Delivery Seminar Series. DRAFT Technical Brief No. 2, 3 July 2008. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2008. 14. ICN. Nature and scope of practice of nurse-midwives. Position Statement. Geneva: International Council of Nurses, 2007. 15. UNFPA. Programme of action. Adopted at the international conference of population and development, Cairo, 5-13 September 1994. United Nations Population Fund, 2004. 16. WHO, ICM, FIGO. Making pregnancy safer: The critical role of the skilled attendant. Joint statement by WHO, ICM and FIGO. World Health Organization: Geneva, 2004. 17. WHO. Vulnerable groups. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2014. Available from http://www.who. int/environmental_health_emergencies/vulnerable_groups/en/ (accessed Mar 31, 2014).
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ANNEX 2: GENERAL METHODOLOGY This Annex describes how the SoWMy 2014 study was designed and conducted.
French and Spanish translations of the original English language questionnaire were also produced.
ICM, UNFPA and WHO co-chaired the development and launch of the SoWMy 2014 report, with UNFPA and WHO coordinating on behalf of the H4+ agencies (UNAIDS, UNFPA, UNICEF, UN Women, the World Bank and WHO).
UNFPA and WHO distributed the self-completion questionnaire and the workshop guidance to their country representatives in each of the 75 countries, and nominated a lead technical midwifery/ SRMNH advisor in each country as the focal point in each country. The focal points worked with personnel from ministries of health and education, professional associations, H4+ agencies and other relevant stakeholders to complete and validate the questionnaire. Each contributor was named in the completed questionnaire, with the option of requesting anonymity in the final report.
ICS Integrare, a UNFPA Implementing Partner, managed the research, writing, production and launch of the report, with research support from the University of Southampton (UK) and the University of Technology, Sydney (Australia). The Averting Maternal Death and Disability programme at the Mailman School of Public Health, ICM, Jhpiego, an affiliate of Johns Hopkins University (USA), the World Bank and WHO provided additional technical contributions. Methods Overall design There were two strands to the primary data collection: (1) a self-completion questionnaire to collect quantitative data on selected indicators, distributed to each of the 75 countries; (2) a full-day deliberative workshop of national stakeholders and experts. It was recommended that all 75 countries hold a workshop. The aim of the questionnaire was to elicit quantitative data on key indicators relating to the midwifery workforce and SRMNH services. The questionnaire was based on that used for the 2011 report, with key questions repeated to enable analysis of change over time in the 58 countries invited to take part in both surveys. It was amended to address lessons learned during the 2011 study, and to include a stronger focus on the size and structure of the midwifery workforce, as well as the key related issues of education, regulation and association and health service infrastructure. The aim of the workshop was to engage national stakeholders and experts to identify barriers to effective coverage of SRMNH care, and to identify potential solutions to these barriers, by collecting qualitative data to inform the identification of success stories and future strategies to strengthen SRMNH care. Ethical approval Ethical approval was obtained from the research ethics committee at the University of Southampton. Particular attention was paid to methods of ensuring that participants were able to give informed consent to taking part in the workshops and that, having done so, steps were taken to avoid harm resulting from participation, e.g. by not making audio or video recordings, by asking participants to sign up to “Chatham House rules” and by giving participants the opportunity to view the workshop report before it was submitted to the research team. Those contributing to the self-completion questionnaire were asked to state whether or not they wanted their participation to be acknowledged in the final report. Data collection: self-completion questionnaire The questionnaire was developed through an iterative feedback process involving the core research team and members of the core group. Reference was made to international policy documents and agreed research and analysis frameworks. Information needs were balanced against the need to make the process manageable for respondents.
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The questionnaire was also made available as an online tool, in English, French and Spanish, allowing respondents to enter their answers online and upload them directly to the analysis team. Once users submitted their responses, the system generated a PDF document displaying their answers, allowing contributors to check and validate the submitted data. A multi-lingual helpdesk was available to assist users throughout the process. Data collection: deliberative workshops The WHO and UNFPA focal points also coordinated with the ministries of health to convene and host the policy workshops. They were asked to invite up to 25 participants per workshop, with participants selected on the basis of their knowledge and expertise of midwifery/SRMNH services and their potential contribution to policy dialogue. In practice, participants included representatives of (amongst others): ministries of health, ministries of education, H4+ agencies, professional associations, civil society, academia, private sector, women’s and consumer groups and parliamentarians. A rapporteur was appointed for each workshop, with responsibility for taking detailed notes. Workshops were held under “Chatham House rules”, with participants asked not to attribute comments to individuals. The country focal points were provided with a “facilitator’s handbook” for the workshops, which included written guidance, template invitations, participant consent forms and a reporting template. Data collection: secondary data Secondary data from published sources were collected on population, demographics, epidemiology and health service delivery to inform the modelling on effective coverage (see Annexes 3 and 4) and the mapping of subnational distributions of populations, women of reproductive age, pregnancies and live births (see Annex 6). Data analysis and reporting Members of the core group analysed the complete quantitative and qualitative dataset. Key subject areas analysed included: alignment between country cadre titles and ISCO classification; current policy environment; education; gap between designated and actual EmONC facilities; workforce availability and projections towards achieving UHC; strength of regulation and professional associations; broad perspectives; policy actions since 2011; salaries; workshop reports. A data analysis workshop was convened in Geneva in March 2014 for the Core Group to present and discuss their respective findings. These emergent findings informed the development of the report and its key messages.
ANNEX 3: METHODOLOGY FOR MODELLING EFFECTIVE COVERAGE OF THE ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS FOR SEXUAL, REPRODUCTIVE, MATERNAL AND NEWBORN HEALTH CARE “Health interventions cannot be carried out without health workers” [1] Health workforce projections are a policymaking necessity [2]. Their purpose in this report, aligned with the WHO framework on health policy and systems research, is to provide “directional” and “correctional” scenarios [3] that can inform policy dialogue and decisions within countries on “what actions need to be taken in the near future to ensure movement towards achieving longer-term objectives” [2]. A key element of these actions is the requirement for further detailed analysis and investigation of the health workforce and health labour market to account for changing demographic, economic and health service contexts [4]. The methodology for modelling effective coverage of the 46 essential interventions for SRMNH care [5] builds upon published papers, tools and guidelines from the World Bank, WHO and others to inform needs-based workforce planning [4,6–15]. The result is a snapshot of “met need”, comparable across countries. “Met need” is defined as: the percentage of a universal SRMNH benefits package that could potentially be obtained by women and newborns given the composition, competencies and available working time of the midwifery workforce* The universal benefits package in this instance is, at minimum, the 46 essential interventions. The indicator is calculated as: Volume of essential SRMNH services that can be provided by the midwifery workforce (expressed in hours of work) X 100 Volume of essential SRMNH services required by women and newborns (expressed in hours of work) The model — Effective Coverage Modelling (ECoMod) – is a tool to test scenarios and encourage multi-criteria decision-making [16,17] in workforce planning for Universal Health Coverage. For each of the 73 countries that contributed to this report, ECoMod was used to create baselines and projections, for each year between 2012 and 2030, of met need for the 46 essential interventions. The model uses self-reported data from countries (collected through the SoWMy 2014 survey), published secondary sources for population, demographics, epidemiology and health service delivery data, as described in Annex 4, and evidence-informed assumptions when countries reported missing data or “don’t know” (Annex 5). A full description is available in a separate Working Paper [18]. The model calculates: 1. The annual SRMNH workforce required to deliver universal coverage (100%) of the 46 essential interventions for SRMNH in relation to the needs of women and newborns; 2. The annual SRMNH workforce available and competent to deliver these interventions; 3. The annual SRMNH workforce deficit in relation to the requirement to meet women’s and newborns' need for SRMNH services; 4. The impact of alternative scenarios and policy options to increase “met need”.
1. Estimating workforce requirements (2012-2030) The mathematical model follows an adjusted service targets-based approach. The model is implemented using the following steps: a. Determining the package of SRMNH services that women and newborns need. This package is the set of 46 essential interventions which together cover the continuum of SRMNH care (pre-pregnancy, antenatal, childbirth and postnatal health care). These 46 interventions are recommended by the Partnership for Maternal Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH): they have an impact on reducing maternal, neonatal and child mortality; are suitable for delivery in low- and middle-income countries, and/or settings where minimal essential care is generally available; and are delivered through the health sector [5]. b. Quantifying the annual volume of each health-care service required. The model estimates the total number of contacts, per year, to deliver each essential intervention to women and/ or newborns based the assumption of universal coverage (100% of need). Universal coverage is estimated based on key demographic variables (e.g. number of women of reproductive age, number of pregnancies, number of live births, each with urban/rural and sub-national disaggregation, projected over time) and on available country-specific data on the incidence/ prevalence of conditions associated with the essential interventions. c. Converting the annual volume of need into time and workload indicators of staffing requirements. Evidence-based estimates of the average time needed by a SRMNH worker to provide each essential intervention are available from the OneHealth tool [19]. When average time is multiplied by the total number of contacts and aggregated across the SRMNH continuum of care, it provides the total available working time (i.e. workforce requirement) needed to achieve universal coverage. 2. Estimating workforce availability (2012-2030) Next, the model calculates, for the years 2012-2030, projections on the availability of the SRMNH workforce for comparison with the workforce requirements calculated in section 1. The model uses self-reported data from the SoWMy 2014 survey. In instances where a country responded “don’t know”, data were either identified from the WHO’s Global Health Observatory or defaulted to evidence-informed modelling assumptions. This is implemented in three steps: a. Determining the initial stock and age-distribution of each SRMNH cadre in the baseline year (2012). The SoWMy 2014 survey requested specific information on the composition, roles and age of the SRMNH workforce. These data were inputted into the model. b. Estimating the changes over time (2013-2030). The model adopts the standard workforce logic of “stock-and-flow” [4,20,21]. It includes an advanced mathematical simulation procedure to calculate, per year, the net number of workers (full-time equivalents, FTEs) who are actively engaged in
* As defined in the glossary, and including associate midwifery/nursing personnel, midwifery/nursing personnel, clinical officers and medical assistants, physicians (generalists), and obstetricians/gynaecologists.
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ANNEX 3: METHODOLOGY FOR MODELLING EFFECTIVE COVERAGE OF THE ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS FOR SEXUAL, REPRODUCTIVE, MATERNAL AND NEWBORN HEALTH CARE (continued) providing SRMNH care. The simulation accounts for the annual outflows (from voluntary attrition, mortality and retirement) and the annual inflows (from new graduates entering the workforce). Total FTEs available per cadre are then converted into total hours of available working time. c. Assigning the total hours of available working time to the provision of essential interventions. WHO guidelines (OneHealth and Optimize for MNH [22]) provide evidenceinformed analysis of the competencies and roles of the SRMNH workforce in relation to the essential interventions. These evidence-based guidelines do not reflect the diversity of task allocation across and within countries, but are appropriate for global projections. Roles for each cadre were allocated using a sequential marginal time allocation procedure: 1. The SRMNH cadres are categorized according to the essential interventions (1–46) based on the WHO guidelines for their role and competencies in an integrated health workforce (from community to primary and specialized cadres). 2. The annual working time available from each cadre category (starting at 1 and rising to 46) is allocated on a marginal basis to match the time requirements for the essential interventions that this cadre is authorized and competent to perform. This is done in blocks of 48 hours,* starting with the first family planning intervention and finishing with the last postnatal intervention. This allocation procedure is iterative. Once the first round of time blocks is allocated, the time allocation starts again from the first intervention until either the working time requirements are met or the available working time from the cadre has been allocated. 3. The available working time from each of the other cadres is then allocated to match the remaining time requirements not met by the previous category. Crucially, each cadre’s
available working time is allocated in increasing order of their roles and competencies. In practice, this means that although a GP could deliver family planning advice, the GP cadre’s time will only be allocated to this intervention if the available working time from other cadres in previous categories (e.g. the midwife cadre) has already been “spent”. The procedure outlined above for allocating available working time is based on the economic principle of “productive efficiency” [23]. This economic principle is adopted within the Optimize 4 MNH guidelines, and encourages the distribution of tasks (interventions) across the integrated health workforce in relation to the cadre’s education, licensing and competencies. Secondly the procedure assumes that no essential SRMNH intervention is prioritized for delivery: each intervention is afforded equal weighting. 3. Estimating the workforce surplus/deficit (2012-2030) The third stage is a straightforward calculation. For each year between 2012 and 2030, the likely SRMNH workforce deficit in meeting women’s and newborns' needs for SRMNH services is the difference between workforce requirements and the available working time. 4. Alternative scenarios and policy options Finally, the model is designed to test scenarios and encourage multi-criteria decision-making in workforce planning for Universal Health Coverage. Four scenarios were developed to explore the impact of alternative policy options: 1) improved family planning to reduce the annual number of pregnancies and births; 2) the scale-up of graduate numbers to 2020; 3) efficiency gains in the existing workforce; and 4) a 50% reduction in voluntary attrition from the existing workforce. The impact of each scenario on the available working time and the resulting increase in met need is then calculated.
* Ideally, the marginal time allocation to the essential interventions should be done in blocks of 1 hour, but for computational efficiency a larger unit of time allocation (48 hours) was used (except for Brazil, China, India and Nigeria, where due to population size blocks of 480 hours were used).
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ANNEX 3: METHODOLOGY FOR MODELLING EFFECTIVE COVERAGE OF THE ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS FOR SEXUAL, REPRODUCTIVE, MATERNAL AND NEWBORN HEALTH CARE (continued) REFERENCES 1. Speybroeck N, Ebener S, Sousa A, et al. Inequality in access to human resources for health: Measurement issues. Background paper for World health report 2006. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2006. 2. WHO. Models and tools for health workforce planning and projections. Human Resources for Health Observer, 3. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2010. 3. WHO. Strategy on health policy and systems research: Changing mindsets. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2012. 4. Ono T, Lafortune G, Schoenstein M. Health workforce planning in OECD countries: A review of 26 projection models from 18 countries. OECD Health Working Papers, No. 62. Paris: OECD, 2013. Available from: http:// www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/ download/5k44t787zcwb.pdf?expire s=1372852424&id=id&accname=gu est&checksum=BF154C76769B3743 407416DA862090BF (accessed Mar 31, 2014). 5. PMNCH. A global review of the key interventions related to reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH). Geneva: Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, 2011. 6. Soucat A, Scheffler R, Gebreyesus TA, editors. The labor market for health workers in Africa. A new look at the crisis. Washington DC: World Bank, 2013. Available from: http://elibrary.worldbank.org/content/book/9780821395554 (accessed Aug 11, 2013).
7. cheffler R, Fulton B. Needs-based estimates for the health workforce. In: Soucat A, Scheffler R, Gebreyesus TA, editors. The labor market for health workers in Africa: A new look at the crisis. Washington DC: World Bank, 2013. Available from: http://elibrary.worldbank.org/content/book/9780821395554 (accessed Aug 11, 2013). 8. Dreesch N, Dolea C, Dal Poz MR, et al. An approach to estimating human resource requirements to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Health Policy Plan 2005; 20(5):267–76. 9. WHO. Estimating the cost of scaling-up maternal and newborn health interventions to reach universal coverage: Methodology and assumptions. Technical working paper. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2005. 10. Segal L, Dalziel K, Bolton T. A work force model to support the adoption of best practice care in chronic diseases — a missing piece in clinical guideline implementation. Implement Sci 2008; 3:35. 11. Segal L, Robertson I. Allied health services planning: Framework for chronic diseases, Working Paper No. 148. Melbourne: Monash University, Centre for Health Economics, 2004. Available from: http:// www.buseco.monash.edu.au/centres/che/pubs/wp148.pdf (accessed on Mar 31, 2014). 12. Segal L, Leach MJ. An evidencebased health workforce model for primary and community care. Implement Sci 2011; 6(1):93.
13. Kurowski C, Wyss K, Abdulla S, Mills A. Scaling up priority health interventions in Tanzania: The human resources challenge. Health Policy Plan 2007; 22(3):113–27. 14. Kurowski C, Mills A. Estimating human resource requirements for scaling up priority health interventions in low-income countries of sub-Saharan Africa: A methodology based on service quantity, tasks and productivity (the QTP methodology). Report No. HEFP01/06-2006. 2006. Available from: http://r4d.dfid.gov.uk/pdf/outputs/ healthecfin_kp/wp01_06.pdf (accessed on Mar 31, 2014). 15. Dussault G, Buchan J, Sermeus W, Padaiga Z. Assessing future health workforce needs. Brussels: WHO Regional Office for Europe; 2010. Available from: http:// www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/ pdf_file/0019/124417/e94295.pdf (accessed on Mar 31, 2014). 16. Baltussen R, Niessen L. Priority setting of health interventions: The need for multi-criteria decision analysis. Cost Eff Resour Alloc 2006; 4:14.
19. Futures Institute. OneHealth model: Intervention treatment assumptions. Glastonbury, CA: Futures Institute, 2013. Available from: http://futuresinstitute.org/Download/Spectrum/Manuals/Intervention Assumptions 2013 9 28.pdf (accessed on Mar 31, 2014). 20. WHO. World health report 2006: Working together for health. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2006. 21. Birch S, Kephart G, TomblinMurphy G, et al. Human resources planning and the production of health: A needs-based analytical framework. Can Public Policy 2007; 33(1):1–16. 22. WHO. Optimize MNH. WHO recommendations for optimizing health workers roles to improve access to key maternal and newborn health interventions through task shifting. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2012. 23. Palmer S, Torgerson D. Economics notes: Definitions of efficiency. BMJ 1999; 318:1136.
17. Tromp N, Baltussen R. Mapping of multiple criteria for priority setting of health interventions: An aid for decision makers. BMC Health Serv Res 2012; 12(1):454. 18. ICS Integrare. Effective coverage modelling — ECoModTM: Methodology paper for the State of the world’s midwifery 2014. Barcelona: Instituto de Cooperación Social Integrare, 2014.
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ANNEX 4: ESTIMATING WOMEN’S AND NEWBORNS’ NEED FOR THE 46 ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS Essential intervention (SRMNH)
Need (defined as number of contacts with a health care worker by the population in need)
Data requirements and sources
PRE-PREGNANCY 1. Family planning advice
2. Family planning methods – delivery
All WRA (i.e. women aged 15-49), one contact per year.
Indicator: Number of WRA (2012-2030).
All WRA who use one of the following contraception methods: condoms/ pills/ injectables/ IUD/ female sterilization. For each year y, need is defined for each method as follows:
Indicator: CPR (latest available figure)
1. Need for condoms (y) = WRA (y) x (CPR + unmet need) x condom method mix x 3. 2. Need for pills and injectables (y) = WRA (y) x (CPR + unmet need) x method mix (pills + injectables) x 3. 3. Need for IUD = [WRA (y) x (CPR + unmet need) x IUD method mix] / 5. 4. Need for female sterilization (y) = [WRA (y) – WRA (y-1)] x (CPR + unmet need) x sterilization method mix.
Source(s): United Nations population database, medium fertility, 2012 revision (available from: http://esa.un.org/wpp/unpp/panel_indicators.htm). Source(s): WHO Global Health Observatory (available from: http://apps.who.int/gho/data/ node.main.531?lang=en). Indicator: Unmet need for family planning. Source(s): United Nations Statistics Division, Millennium Development Goals Indicators (latest year available); WHO Global Health Observatory (latest year available) (available from http://unstats.un.org/UNSD/MDG/Data.aspx); DHS StatCompiler (available from: http://www.statcompiler.com/); Partnership in Action 2012-2013 Report (available from: http://www.familyplanning2020.org/images/content/documents/FP2020_Partnership_in_ Action_2012-2013.pdf); Angola, Botswana: Alkema L, Kantorova V, Menozzi C, Biddlecom A. National, regional, and global rates and trends in contraceptive prevalence and unmet need for family planning between 1990 and 2015: a systematic and comprehensive analysis. Lancet 2013; 381:1642–52. Indicator: Prevalence of contraceptive method mix. Source(s): Seiber E, Bertrand J, Sullivan T. Changes in contraceptive method mix in developing countries. International Family Planning Perspectives 2007; 33(3). (available from: http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/journals/3311707.pdf). Note: Information in this source for our purposes is only available for the following methods: IUD/ pill/ injectable/ condom/ female sterilization. Implants are apparently excluded from method mix because they account, across countries, for less than 1% of all contraception methods.
3a. Prevention and management of STIs and HIV in all WRA: prevention of STIs and HIV
All WRA, one contact per year.
3b. Prevention and management of STIs and HIV in all WRA: management of STIs
All WRA with syphilis, gonorrhoea, chlamydia or trichomoniasis. For each year y, calculated as follows:
Indicator: Number of WRA (2012-2030). Source(s): United Nations population database, 2012 revision (available from: http://esa. un.org/wpp/unpp/panel_indicators.htm).
1. Need for management of syphilis (y) = WRA (y) x incidence of syphilis.
Indicator: Incidence of STIs in WRA. Source(s): WHO. Global incidence of selected curable sexually transmitted infections by region. Geneva: WHO, 2008 (available from: http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstre am/10665/75181/1/9789241503839_eng.pdf?ua=1).
2. Need for management of gonorrhoea (y) = WRA (y) x incidence of gonorrhoea. 3. Need for management of chlamydia (y) = WRA (y) x incidence of chlamydia. 4. Need for management of trichomoniasis (y) = WRA (y) x incidence of trichomoniasis. 3c. Prevention and management of STIs and HIV in all WRA: management of HIV
All WRA needing ART, calculated as follows: Number of WRA needing ART in 2012 / WRA in 2012 x WRA (y).
4. Folic acid fortification/ supplementation
All WRA, one contact per year.
Indicator: % of WRA needing ART (number of adults needing ART x % of HIV positive adults who are women). Source(s): Number of adults needing ART (available from: http://www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/datatools/aidsinfo/); some countries’ individual sources; % of HIV positive adults who are women (number of female adults who are HIV positive / number of all adults who are HIV positive) from UNAIDS AIDSinfo database (available from: http://www.unaids.org/ en/dataanalysis/datatools/aidsinfo/); some countries’ individual sources.
PREGNANCY 5. Iron and folic acid supplementation
All PW, one contact per year.
6. Tetanus vaccination
All PW, one contact per year.
7a. Prevention and management of malaria with insecticide-treated nets and antimalarials: prevention
All PW living in areas of high malaria transmission, calculated as follows:
Indicator: % population living in high malaria transmission areas (number of people living in high risk areas (or if not available, used living in active foci)/total population).
Need for prevention of malaria (y) = PW (y) x % population in the country living in areas of high malaria transmission.
Source(s): WHO. Annex 6A of the World Malaria Report 2013. Geneva: WHO, 2013 (available from: http://www.who.int/malaria/publications/world_malaria_report_2013/en/).
ANC=antenatal care; ART=antiretroviral therapy; CPR=contraceptive prevalence rate; IUD=intrauterine device; PMTCT=preventing mother to child transmission; pPROM=pre-term premature rupture of membranes; PW=pregnant women; STIs= sexually transmitted infections; WRA=women of reproductive age.
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ESTIMATING WOMEN’S AND NEWBORNS’ NEED FOR THE 46 ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS (continued) Essential intervention (SRMNH)
Need (defined as number of contacts with a health care worker by the population in need)
Data requirements and sources
PREGNANCY (continued) 7b. Prevention and management of malaria with insecticide-treated nets and antimalarials: management
All PW with presumed and confirmed malaria, calculated as follows: Need for malaria management (y) = PW (y) x incidence of presumed and confirmed malaria cases.
8a. Prevention and management of STIs (as part of ANC): prevention of STIs and HIV
All PW, one contact per year.
8b. Prevention and management of STIs (as part of ANC): management of STIs
All PW with gonorrhoea, chlamydia or trichomoniasis (note syphilis is addressed separately below). For each year y, calculated as follows: 1. Need for management of gonorrhoea (y) = PW (y) x incidence of gonorrhoea.
Indicator: Incidence of resumed and confirmed malaria cases in PW, (Number of presumed and confirmed malaria cases/Total United Nations population estimates). Source(s): WHO. Annex 6A of the World Malaria Report 2013. Geneva: WHO, 2013 (available from: http://www.who.int/malaria/publications/world_malaria_report_2013/en/).
Indicator: Incidence of STIs in PW. Sources(s): WHO. Global incidence of selected curable sexually transmitted infections by region. Geneva: WHO, 2008. (available from: http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstre am/10665/75181/1/9789241503839_eng.pdf?ua=1).
2. Need for management of chlamydia (y) = PW (y) x incidence of chlamydia. 3. Need for management of trichomoniasis (y) = PW(y) x incidence of trichomoniasis. 8c. Prevention and management of STIs (as part of ANC): management of HIV
All PW needing ART to avoid mother-to-child transmission, calculated as follows: Need for management of HIV (y) = % (number of pregnant women needing ART for PMTCT in 2012/ PW in 2012) x PW (y).
Indicator: % of HIV positive PW needing effective ART for PMTCT. Source(s): For Africa: USAID AIDSinfo (available from: http://www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/datatools/aidsinfo/ ); For other regions: UNAIDS. Global Report: UNAIDS report on the global AIDS epidemic 2013. (available from: http://www.unaids.org/en/media/unaids/contentassets/documents/ epidemiology/2013/gr2013/UNAIDS_Global_Report_2013_en.pdf); Some countries’ individual sources. Note: Where value is <500 or <1000, 500 and 1000 values were assumed, respectively; where value is not available for country, the following data were used: HIV positive PW needing ART for PMTCT {region} x (HIV infected females {country}/ HIV infected females {region}).
9. 10.
Calcium supplementation to prevent hypertension
All PW, one contact per year.
Interventions for cessation of smoking
All PW who smoke, calculated as follows:
Indicators: Current smoking of any tobacco product (age-standardized rate), all females
Need for smoking cessation interventions (y) = PW x prevalence of smoking in women aged over 15 years.
Source(s): WHO Global Health Observatory (available from: http://apps.who.int/gho/data/ node.main.1250?lang=en).
11a. Screening for and treatment of syphilis: screening
All PW, one contact per year.
11b. Screening for and treatment of syphilis: treatment
All PW with syphilis. For each year y, calculated as follows:
12+13: Antihypertensive drugs to treat high blood pressure (including low-dose aspirin to prevent pre-eclampsia)
All PW with raised blood pressure and all PW with pre-eclampsia, calculated as follows:
14. Magnesium sulphate for eclampsia
All PW with eclampsia and pre-eclampsia, calculated as follows:
1. Need for management of syphilis (y) = PW (y) x incidence of syphilis.
Need for antihypertensive drugs (y) = [WRA x (incidence of pre-eclampsia)] + [live births x (incidence of pre-eclampsia)].
Need for magnesium sulphate (y) = live births x (incidence of eclampsia + incidence of pre-eclampsia).
Note: If no data were found for a particular country, used WHO regional average for the countries in the dataset.
Indicator: Incidence of syphilis in PW. Sources(s): WHO. Global incidence of selected curable sexually transmitted infections by region. Geneva: WHO, 2008 (available from: http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstre am/10665/75181/1/9789241503839_eng.pdf?ua=1). Indicator: Incidence of high blood pressure and pre-eclampsia in PW. Source(s): Dolea C, AbouZahr C. Global burden of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in the year 2000. Evidence and Information for Policy. Geneva: WHO, 2003 (available from: http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statistics/bod_hypertensivedisordersofpregnancy.pdf). Note: Only half of all hypertensive disorders presented in Table 6.1 in the reference paper were considered for the analysis. Indicator: Incidence of pre-eclampsia and eclampsia in PW. Source(s): Dolea C, AbouZahr C. Global burden of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in the year 2000. Evidence and Information for Policy. Geneva: WHO, 2003 (available from: http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statistics/bod_hypertensivedisordersofpregnancy. pdf); Regional rates used according to WHO regions. Note: Total eclampsia incidence rates calculated as percentage of pre-eclampsia. Regional rates by WHO regions.
(continued)
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ESTIMATING WOMEN’S AND NEWBORNS’ NEED FOR THE 46 ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS (continued) Essential intervention (SRMNH)
Need (defined as number of contacts with a health care worker by the population in need)
Data requirements and sources
All cases of pPROM, calculated as follows:
Indicator: Incidence of pPROM
Need for antibiotics for pPROM (y) = all births including stillbirths (y) x incidence of pPROM.
Source(s): WHO global survey on maternal and perinatal health, 2005 (available from: http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/best_practices/GS_Tabulation.pdf?ua=1 ).
PREGNANCY (continued) 15. Antibiotics for pre-term premature rupture of membranes (pPROM)
Note: Where country rate not available used regional rate; where regional rate not available used world total rate. 16. Corticosteroids to prevent respiratory distress
17. Safe abortion
All preterm births (including stillbirths), calculated as:
Indicators: Prevalence of preterm births.
Need for corticosteroids (y) = all births, including stillbirths (y) x preterm birth rate.
Source(s): Healthy Newborn Network. Global and national newborn health data and indicators (available from: http://www.healthynewbornnetwork.org/resource/databaseglobal-and-national-newborn-health-data-and-indicators ).
All safe abortions, calculated as follows:
Indicator: Rate of safe abortions.
Need for safe abortions (y) = WRA (y) x rate of safe abortions.
Source(s): Sedgh G, Singh S, Shah IH, et al. Induced abortion: incidence and trends worldwide from 1995 to 2008. Lancet 2012; 379:625‐32 (available from: http://www.the lancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140673611617868/table?tableid=tbl2&tableidtype= table_id&sectionType=red). Note: Where the value was <0.5 used 0.5.
18. Post-abortion care
All unsafe abortions, calculated as follows:
Indicator: Rate of unsafe abortions.
Need for post-abortion care (y) = WRA(y) x rate of unsafe abortions.
Source(s): Sedgh G, Singh S, Shah IH, et al. Induced abortion: incidence and trends worldwide from 1995 to 2008. Lancet 2012; 379:625–32 (available from: http://www.the lancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140673611617868/table?tableid=tbl2&tableidtype= table_id&sectionType=red). Note: Where the value was <0.5 used 0.5.
19. Reduce malpresentation at birth with external cephalic version
20. Induction of labour to manage pre-labour rupture of membranes at term
All breech births (including stillbirths), calculated as follows: Need for external cephalic version (y) = all births, including stillbirths (y) x incidence of breech births (including stillbirths).
Indicator: Incidence of breech presentations. Source(s): WHO. Global survey on maternal and perinatal health. Statistics on breech presentations, 2005 (available from: http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/best_practices/GS_Tabulation.pdf?ua=1). Note: Where country rate not available used regional rate; where regional rate not available used world total rate.
All cases of pPROM, calculated as follows:
Indicator: Incidence of pPROM.
Need for antibiotics for pPROM (y) = all births, including stillbirths (y) x incidence of pPROM.
Source(s): WHO. Global survey on maternal and perinatal health. Statistics on breech presentations, 2005 (available from: http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/best_practices/GS_Tabulation.pdf?ua=1).
CHILDBIRTH 23. Normal labour and delivery management and social support during childbirth
All births (including stillbirths), one contact.
21+22+24. Active management of third stage of labour (to deliver placenta) to prevent post-partum haemorrhage (including uterine massage, uterotonics and cord traction)
All births (including stillbirths), one contact.
26a. Screen and manage HIV during childbirth – screen if not already tested
All births (including stillbirths) except in those cases when there have been 4 ANC visits, calculated as follows:
26b. Screen and manage HIV during childbirth – treat
All births (including stillbirths) of HIV positive women who have not had 4 ANC visits, calculated as follows:
Need for screening for HIV during childbirth (y) = all births including stillbirths (y) x (1 - % of cases with 4 ANC visits).
Need for screening for HIV during childbirth (y) = all births, including stillbirths (y) x (% of cases without 4 ANC visits) x % HIV prevalence in all adults. 27+28. C-section for maternal/ foetal indication (including prophylactic antibiotics for c-section)
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All births, including stillbirths, which require c-section, calculated as follows: Need for c-section (y) = all births, including stillbirths (y) x fixed assumption on need for a c-section.
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Indicator: % of antenatal care coverage (4 visits). Source(s): United Nations Statistics Division. The official United Nations site for the MDG indicators (available from: http://mdgs.un.org/unsd/mdg/Default.aspx).
Indicator: % of antenatal care coverage (4 visits) of HIV positive women. Source(s): United Nations Statistics Division. The official United Nations site for the MDG indicators (available from: http://mdgs.un.org/unsd/mdg/Default.aspx ); UNAIDS AIDSinfo (available from: http://www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/datatools/aidsinfo/); some countries from individual sources.
Note: Assumption = 0.05 x all births (including stillbirths).
ESTIMATING WOMEN’S AND NEWBORNS’ NEED FOR THE 46 ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS (continued) Essential intervention (SRMNH)
Need (defined as number of contacts with a health care worker by the population in need)
Data requirements and sources
CHILDBIRTH (continued) 29. Induction of labour for prolonged pregnancy (midwife or nurse)
All births including stillbirths that occur after 41 weeks, calculated as follows:
30+25. Management of post-partum haemorrhage (manual removal of placenta and/or surgical procedures and/or oxytocics)
All births, including stillbirths, where there is postpartum haemorrhage, calculated as follows:
Need for induction of labour (y) = pregnancies (y) x % of pregnancies which go beyond 41 weeks.
Need for management of post-partum haemorrhage (y) = WRA (y) x incidence of post-partum haemorrhage (per 1000 women aged 15-49).
Indicator: % pregnancies terminated after 42 weeks. Source(s): OneHealth Model: Interventions treatment assumptions, 2013 (available from: http://futuresinstitute.org/Download/Spectrum/Manuals/Intervention%20 Assumptions%202013%209%2028.pdf). Note: Assumption = 0.05 x pregnancies. Indicator: Incidence of post-partum haemorrhage cases. Source(s): Dolea C, AbouZahr C, Stein C. Global burden of maternal haemorrhage in the year 2000. Evidence and information for policy. Geneva: WHO, 2003 (available from: http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statistics/bod_maternalhaemorrhage.pdf).
POSTNATAL CARE 31-34 and 36-38. Postnatal preventive care
All births (including stillbirths), 4 contacts.
35. Detect and treat postpartum sepsis (PPS)
All cases of post-partum sepsis, calculated as follows: Need for detecting and treating post-partum sepsis (y) = WRA (y) x incidence of post-partum sepsis per 1000 WRA.
39. Neonatal resuscitation with bag and mask
All newborns requiring resuscitation, calculated as follows: Need for neonatal resuscitation (y) = live births (y) x 0.01.
Indicator: Incidence of post-partum sepsis. Source(s): Dolea C, AbouZahr C, Stein C. Global burden of maternal sepsis in the year 2000. Evidence and information for policy. Geneva: WHO, 2003 (available from: http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statistics/bod_maternalsepsis.pdf). Indicator: % of newborns requiring resuscitation. Source(s): OneHealth Model: Interventions treatment assumptions, 2013 (available from: http://futuresinstitute.org/Download/Spectrum/Manuals/Intervention%20 Assumptions%202013%209%2028.pdf). Note: around 1% of newborns require resuscitation
40. Kangaroo mother care
All newborns with low birth weight, calculated as follows: Need for kangaroo mother care (y) = live births (y) x % of newborns with low birth weight.
41. Extra support for feeding small and preterm babies
42. Management of newborns with jaundice
43. Initiate prophylactic ART for babies exposed to HIV
All preterm births (including stillbirths), calculated as follows:
Indicator: % of newborns with low birth weight. Source(s): UNICEF and WHO. Low birth weight: country, regional and global estimates. New York: UNICEF, 2004 (available from: http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/ low_birthweight_from_EY.pdf). Indicators: % of preterm birth.
Need for extra feeding support (y) = all births including stillbirths (y) x preterm birth rate.
Source(s): Healthy Newborn Network. Global and national newborn health data and indicators. (available from: http://www.healthynewbornnetwork.org/resource/databaseglobal-and-national-newborn-health-data-and-indicators).
All newborns with jaundice, calculated as follows:
Indicator: % of newborns with jaundice.
Need for management of jaundice (y) = live births (y) x % of newborns with jaundice requiring phototherapy.
Source(s): Teune MJ, Bakhuizen S, Gyamfi Bannerman C, et al. A systematic review of severe morbidity in infants born late preterm. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011; 205:374.e1-9.
All births, including stillbirths (except when there have been 4 ANC visits) in women who are HIV positive, calculated as follows:
Indicator: % of newborns, born from a HIV positive woman, who received prophylactic ART.
Need for prophylactic ART (y) = all births including stillbirths (y) x (1 - % of cases with 4 ANC visits) x % HIV positive adults. 44. Presumptive antibiotic therapy for newborns at risk of bacterial infections
All newborns at risk of bacterial infection, calculated as follows:
45. Surfactant to prevent respiratory distress syndrome in preterm babies
All preterm births (including stillbirths), calculated as follows:
46. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) to manage babies with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS)
All newborns with respiratory distress syndrome, calculated as follows:
Need for presumptive antibiotic therapy (y) = live births (y) x incidence of bacterial infection in newborns.
Need for surfactant (y) = live births (y) x preterm birth rate.
Need for surfactant(y) = live births (y) x incidence of respiratory distress syndrome in newborns.
Note: Uniform assumption. Sum of incidence in late preterm infants (1245/26,252) and in full-term infants (2033/150,700).
Source(s): United Nations Statistics Division. The official United Nations site for the MDG indicators (available from: http://mdgs.un.org/unsd/mdg/Default.aspx ); UNAIDS AIDSinfo (available from: http://www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/datatools/aidsinfo/). Indicator: Incidence of bacterial infection in newborns. Source(s): Singh S, Darroch JE, Ashford LS. Adding it up: the need for and cost of maternal and newborn care – estimates for 2012. Guttmacher Institute, 2013 (available from: http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/AIU-MNH-2012-estimates.pdf). Note: Uniform assumption of 20%. Indicator: % of preterm births. Source(s): UNICEF and WHO. Low birth weight: country, regional and global estimates. New York: UNICEF, 2004 (available from: http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/ low_birthweight_from_EY.pdf). Indicator: Incidence of respiratory distress syndrome in newborns. Source(s): Rodriguez RJ, Martin RJ, Fanaroff AA. Respiratory distress syndrome and its management – Chapter 19. In Fanaroff AA, Martin RJ. Neonatal-perinatal medicine: diseases of the fetus and infant. St Louis: Mosby, 2010. (available from http://www. thoracic.org/education/breathing-in-america/resources/chapter-19-respiratorydistress-syndr.pdf). Note: Uniform assumption of 1%
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ANNEX 5. DECISION RULES The 73 SoWMy countries provided new information on the midwifery workforce by: cadre, ISCO classification, number, age distribution, % time spent on MNH services, annual attrition (voluntary), retirement age, graduates and enrolments, years of education, and student attrition from education. The values for each of these indicators informed the modelled projections of workforce availability in relation to women’s and newborn need for the 46 essential SRMNH interventions. In the case of missing or inconsistent data, the model applied a fixed set of decision rules, listed below. Indicator used in the modelled projections
Example value
Decision rule (for missing or inconsistent data)
Country
A.N. Other
n/a
Name of cadre
Midwife
Apply the name of the category under which the country cadre was listed.
International Standard Classification of Occupation (ISCO) code
Code 2222
Assigned based on the roles and responsibilities specified, in the context of the cadre category selected.
Number of workers
1,515
Default to WHO Global Health Observatory (2014 version). If not in WHO Global Health Observatory, secondary source from government policy document. If neither, zero.
Age distribution
Aged under 30: 300 workers Apply an equal distribution of the total number of workers across age groups. Aged 30-39: 510 workers Aged 40-49: 424 workers Aged over 50: 281 workers
% time spent on MNH
100%
Apply the sample median, across all countries, for that ISCO code: –2222 (midwifery professionals): 100% –2221 (nursing professionals): 85% –3222 (midwifery professionals, associates): 100% –3221 (nursing professionals, associates): 55% –2211 (medical practitioners, generalists): 30% –2212 (medical practitioners, specialists ob/gyn): 100% –2240 or 3256 (paramedical practitioners and medical assistants): 75%
Annual workforce attrition (voluntary)
10%
Apply 4% for all cadres.
Retirement age
62 years
Apply the retirement age of any cadre in the same country with the same ISCO code. If the former not available, retirement age of any other cadre in the same country, regardless of ISCO code. If retirement age not available for any cadre, default to 65.
Graduates in 2012
43 graduates
Apply 5% of the total number of workers in 2012, equivalent to a stable replacement rate of workforce turnover.
Enrolments each year from 2010 to 2015
2010: 52 students 2011: 50 students 2012: 54 students 2013: 48 students 2014: 55 students 2015: 60 students
Default to the last available enrolment figure from previous years. If not available, assume enrolment is equal to graduates from 2012.
Years of education
3 years
Apply the given years of education of any cadre with the same ISCO code in the same country. If former not available, assign the sample median, across all countries, for that ISCO code: –2222 (midwifery professionals): 3 years –2221 (nursing professionals): 3 years –3222 (midwifery professionals, associates): 2 years –3221 (nursing professionals, associates): 2 years –2211 (medical practitioners, generalists): 7 years –2212 (medical practitioners, specialists ob/gyn): 10 years –2240 or 3256 (paramedical practitioners and medical assistants): 3 years
Student attrition from education
20%
Apply student attrition from education for any cadre with the same ISCO code in the same country. If the former not available, assign the sample median, across all countries, for that ISCO code.
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ANNEX 6. MAPPING OF SUBNATIONAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF POPULATIONS, WOMEN OF REPRODUCTIVE AGE, PREGNANCIES AND LIVE BIRTHS The mapping methodology used in this report was developed and published by a group of partners (University of Southampton, ICS Integrare, USAID, Norad, UNFPA, WHO) working on the State of the Art in Mapping for MNH [1]. It includes new, innovative approaches to make the geography of MNH informative for policy and planning at country level. In particular, this report utilizes the increasing capacity of geographic information systems (GIS) to map women of reproductive age (WRA), pregnancies and live births [2]. The methodology follows a simple four-step process to disaggregate and estimate distributions of populations, WRA, pregnancies and live births by subnational boundaries. Each of the four steps is described below. 1. Construction of detailed and contemporary population distribution datasets Construction of estimates of population distribution for Africa and Asia at approximately 100 metre spatial resolution has recently been completed (full details are available at www. worldpop.org.uk) [3-8]. Briefly, a GIS-linked database of census and official population estimate data was constructed, targeting the most recent and spatially detailed datasets available, given their importance in producing accurate mapping. Detailed 30 metre spatial resolution maps of settlement extents were derived from Landsat satellite imagery through either semi-automated classification approaches [6-8] or expert opinion-based analyses. These settlement maps were then used to refine land cover data. Local census data mapped at fine resolution by enumeration area level from sample countries across Africa and Asia were exploited to identify typical regional per-land cover class population densities. These were then applied to redistribute census counts by regional ecozones to map human population distributions at approximately 100 metre spatial resolution continent-wide. Where available, additional country-specific datasets providing valuable data on population distributions, not captured by censuses, such as internally displaced people or detailed national surveys, were incorporated into the mapping process. Population datasets for the Americas were being constructed at the time of analysis, and therefore population datasets from the Global Rural Urban Mapping Project (GRUMP) [9] were used for countries in the Americas. 2. Construction of future projection population distribution datasets United Nations estimates of urban- and rural-specific growth rates [10] were compiled for all 73 countries participating in this report. These were applied to the datasets described above. For populations mapped as living within urban areas, as defined by Columbia Universityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Global Rural Urban Mapping Project urban extent map [9] the urban growth rates were applied. For all other
populations the rural growth rates were applied. This approach was used to construct 2010, 2012, 2015, 2020, 2025 and 2030 population distribution datasets, which were adjusted to ensure that national population totals matched those estimated by the United Nations. 3. Construction of WRA distribution datasets Following previously published methods [11], data on subnational population compositions were obtained from a variety of sources for as many countries as possible, principally from contemporary census-based counts broken down at a fine resolution administrative unit level. These were matched to corresponding GIS datasets showing the boundaries of each unit, and used to adjust the existing spatial population datasets described above to produce estimates of the distributions of populations by sex and 5-year age group. The datasets were then adjusted to ensure that national population totals by age group, specific city totals and urban/rural totals matched those reported by the United Nations [12]. A summation of the datasets representing females in the 15-49 year age groups was undertaken to produce WRA datasets. 4. Mapping pregnancies and live births Following the previously published approach [2], in 73 countries, age-specific fertility rates by 5-year age groupings, disaggregated by subnational regions and urban versus rural, were derived from the most recent national household surveys conducted as part of the Demographic and Household Survey (DHS) programme (www.measuredhs.com). GIS datasets representing the boundaries of the subregions (http://spatialdata.dhsprogram.com/) and the urban extents within them were assembled [9], and the agespecific fertility rates were matched to these boundaries. These rates were then used to adjust each 5-year age grouped female population distribution dataset described above to produce gridded estimates of the distributions of live births across each country. At the national level, these totals were then adjusted linearly to ensure that their totals matched those estimated by the United Nations for the 2010-2030 period [12] to create the different year datasets. For countries where no recent DHS data existed (n= 25) the population datasets described above were simply adjusted to ensure that their totals matched those of the United Nations estimates. To convert the gridded datasets of numbers of live births to numbers of pregnancies, national level estimates of numbers of pregnancies in 2012 were obtained from the Guttmacher Institute (www.guttmacher.org) and the 2012 birth dataset totals were adjusted nationally to match these totals. For the other years, it was assumed that the national-level ratios between numbers of births and pregnancies in 2012 remained constant, and these country-specific ratios were used to convert each live birth dataset to a pregnancy dataset.
REFERENCES 1. Ebener S, Guerra-Arias M, Campbell J, et al. The geography of maternal and newborn health: The state of the art. Int J Geoinformatics 2014 (in review).
4. Linard C, Gilbert M, Snow RW, et al. Population distribution, settlement patterns and accessibility across Africa in 2010. PLoS ONE 2012; 7:e31743.
7. Tatem AJ, Noor AM, Hay SI. Assessing the accuracy of satellite derived global and national urban maps in Kenya. Rem Sens Env 2005; 96:87-97.
2. Tatem AJ, Campbell J, GuerraArias M, et al. Mapping for maternal and newborn health: The distributions of women of childbearing age, pregnancies and births. Int J Health Geogr 2014; 13:2.
5. Linard C, Gilbert M, Tatem AJ. Assessing the use of global land cover data for guiding large area population distribution modelling. GeoJournal 2010; doi:10.1007/ s10708-010-9364-8.
8. Tatem AJ, Noor AM, von Hagen C, et al. High resolution population maps for low income nations: Combining land cover and census in East Africa. PLoS One 2007; 2:e1298.
6. Tatem AJ, Noor AM, Hay SI. Defining approaches to settlement mapping for public health management in Kenya using medium spatial resolution satellite imagery. Rem Sens Env 2004; 93:42-52.
9. Balk DL, Deichmann U, Yetman G, et al. Determining global population distribution: Methods, applications and data. Adv Parasitol 2006; 62:119-156.
3. Linard C, Alegana VA, Noor AM, et al. A high resolution spatial population database of Somalia for disease risk mapping. Int J Health Geogr 2010; 9:45.
10. United Nations Population Division. World urbanization prospects, 2013 revision. New York: United Nations, 2013. 11. Tatem AJ, Garcia AJ, Snow RW, et al. Millennium development health metrics: Where do Africaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s children and women of childbearing age live? Population Health Metrics 2013; 11. 12. United Nations Population Division. World population prospects, 2012 revision. New York: United Nations, 2012.
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ANNEX 7. TASKS WITHIN THE SCOPE OF MIDWIFERY PROFESSIONALS ACCORDING TO THE INTERNATIONAL STANDARD CLASSIFICATION OF OCCUPATIONS The tasks for midwifery professionals are divided into eight categories as follows: 1. planning, providing and evaluating care and support services for women and babies before, during and after pregnancy and childbirth according to the practice and standards of modern midwifery care; 2. providing advice to women and families and conducting community education on health, nutrition, hygiene, exercise, birth and emergency plans, breastfeeding, newborn care, family planning and contraception, lifestyle and other topics related to pregnancy and childbirth; 3. assessing progress during pregnancy and childbirth, managing complications and recognizing warning signs requiring referral to a medical doctor with specialized skills in obstetrics;
4. monitoring the health status of newborns managing complications and recognizing warning signs requiring referral to a medical doctor with specialized skills in neonatology; 5. monitoring pain and discomfort experienced by women during labour and delivery and alleviating pain using a variety of therapies, including pain-killing drugs; 6. reporting births to government authorities to meet legal and professional requirements; 7. conducting research on midwifery practices and procedures and disseminating findings e.g. through scientific papers and reports; 8. planning and conducting midwifery education activities in clinical and community settings.
Source: ILO. ISCO-08 group definitions. Final draft. International Labour Organization. Available from: http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/isco/isco08/index.htm (accessed April 24, 2014).
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Now that youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve read the report, please share the evidence, inform policy dialogue, take action, so that all women and newborns obtain quality midwifery care. Every woman and her newborn have the right to quality care during pregnancy, childbirth and after birth #SoWMy2014
#Womenshealth and #midwives go hand in hand. Stand up for keeping women safe: #SoWMy2014
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Every woman and every child has the right to good-quality health care. #SoWMy2014
Sweden managed to drastically lower its maternal death ratio by using the services of midwives. #SoWMy2014
The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the United Nations, including UNFPA, or the UN Member States. The designations employed and the presentation of material on any maps do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations or UNFPA concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
#Midwives help with the elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV
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